DIY Bubble Dissipation

tangman99

New member
I have had a lot of trouble with bubbles bursting in my refugium and getting splash and salt creep all over everything. I found some nice professional solutions on this site made from acrylic but I've never tried my hand at acrylic and I just did not have that much time. So I started looking around for a cheap and easy fix and this is my humble solution. It works great and cost me a total of $1.79. I do have to give credit to Melev for his beautiful designed solution that gave me the inspiration to build my cheap version.

This is my bubbling sump before I did anything.

diy1.jpg


You can see the splash and salt all over the rim of the fuge.

I went to WallyMart and bought this straw dispenser that they were selling for $1.50 that is made of a very sturdy plastic.

diy2.jpg


After pulling out the insert and all 150 straws, this is container that you have left.

diy3.jpg


I used my dremel to cut a hole in the bottom for my 1" pvc pipe to fit through. I drilled it close to an edge so it would fit up close to a corner of my fuge. This is it with a piece of pipe to test fit.

diy4.jpg


Another view:

diy5.jpg


I them dremmeled a slot at the side of the top for the air to escape toward the center of the fuge.

diy6.jpg


I then cut my drain pipe off about 1 inch above the water and placed it in the bubble dissipator and I then used a .29 cent 1" coupler to hold the dissipator up on the pipe. This keeps the bubble catcher from slipping down the pipe and keeps splash from escaping through the top hole.

diy7.jpg


I then put a "T" inside for most of the bubble to escape inside the bubble catcher. I then extended the pipe out the bottom to get the water flow to tumble my Chato. I was still getting a few bubbles out the bottom, but they were few and far between. Most of them rose right up inside the bubble catcher.

diy8.jpg


As my flow is not really enough to tumble my Chato, I just ended up putting an elbow under the "T" keep all the bubbles inside.

The air then rises and escapes out the slot so no more splash and salt everywhere.

diy9.jpg


This took me about 30 minutes to do even with taking all the pictures. Just thought I'd share in case someone wanted to try a cheap, fast and easy fix.
 
Last edited:
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7318754#post7318754 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by podheadx
Sweet workbench! and also thank Melev for all his inspiration and knolagble help to all of US.

:lol: Definitely not a workbench. It was the only black thing I had to use as a background so it would show up good in the picture.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7318754#post7318754 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by podheadx
Sweet workbench! and also thank Melev for all his inspiration and knolagble help to all of US.

man i was thinking the same thing.. and that was the only black thing to use as a background?? so your telling me you sacaficed the vette ( letting her get all dirty ) so you can have a non bubbly tank!!!!!!! :eek1: :eek1: :rollface:
 
Does the 30 minuts include the time it took to wash the car?

Seriously though, did you have any problems with microbubbles before installing the bubble catcher? If so, was there any noticeable difference? I'm still blaming my overflow for my microbubbles, looks like your solution might help me.
 
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