Zephrant
Premium Member
What do you make after a Monster Beckett? A Mini Beckett!
I needed another design for a skimmer that would be more appropriate for tanks in the 50-150 gallon range, so I went to work in the shop. 3 days later, and we are ready for testing. I didn't take many pictures this time, but here is what I have.
To start with- I cut grooves for the 6" and 2.5" acrylic tube in the piece for the top of the box, then glued the box together. Flush route, and 1/8" round-over all edges, and then polish them now. After the tubes are glued down, it is hard to polish. Don't forget the hole for the 1.5" bulkhead.
I tried a more conventional design this time and did not go with the coaxial injection. That part of the monster skimmer took a lot of time and space in the bottom box, and I wanted this to be as small as possible.
I made up patterns for the flanges (4 types total) and cut them out. I'll do a DIY flange write-up soon.
Assemble everything- Always use grooves for the tube to sit in for strength.
The Beckett injector turned out well- It is just a short tube with the base flange cut with a hole that the Beckett fits snug in, and a 3/4" to 1" adapter in the top which the other end of the Beckett fits snug in. I added O-rings to each end of the Beckett, and then snug down the bolts to keep things tight. I'm of the opinion that the chamber does not need to be perfectly water-tight for good performance, just snug.
I'll post some run-time pictures of it after the glue dries for a few days.
Zeph
I needed another design for a skimmer that would be more appropriate for tanks in the 50-150 gallon range, so I went to work in the shop. 3 days later, and we are ready for testing. I didn't take many pictures this time, but here is what I have.
To start with- I cut grooves for the 6" and 2.5" acrylic tube in the piece for the top of the box, then glued the box together. Flush route, and 1/8" round-over all edges, and then polish them now. After the tubes are glued down, it is hard to polish. Don't forget the hole for the 1.5" bulkhead.
I tried a more conventional design this time and did not go with the coaxial injection. That part of the monster skimmer took a lot of time and space in the bottom box, and I wanted this to be as small as possible.
I made up patterns for the flanges (4 types total) and cut them out. I'll do a DIY flange write-up soon.
Assemble everything- Always use grooves for the tube to sit in for strength.
The Beckett injector turned out well- It is just a short tube with the base flange cut with a hole that the Beckett fits snug in, and a 3/4" to 1" adapter in the top which the other end of the Beckett fits snug in. I added O-rings to each end of the Beckett, and then snug down the bolts to keep things tight. I'm of the opinion that the chamber does not need to be perfectly water-tight for good performance, just snug.
I'll post some run-time pictures of it after the glue dries for a few days.
Zeph