First post - Pump question!!

cpages2

New member
So I just picked up my second 90Gallon tank. This one came with an inline motor from Sump to drilled tank.

I hooked everything up, checked for leaks and filled water. I then brought the motor down below sump (to prime it) and turned it on. All my hosing is clear so I could see water flowing in with no air, but all the air leaving the motor is ful of millions of micro-bubbles. In seconds you couldnt see through tank it had so much air-bubbles.

Here is the pump:

http://www.lgpc.com/Product/ItemDetail.aspx?ProductID=1103


I pulled everything apart and checked all fittings and tightened everything and there doesnt seem to be any leaks. A friend of mine said there may be some air inside and leave it running. Left it on for 5 minutes and the same issue just continues micro-bubbles.

I shined a light into the hose coming into motor and the water is steady with no air, but leaving the motor I cant see anything by bubbles.

Has anyone ever had this problem or have any ideas???

- Mike
 
<img src="/images/welcome.gif" width="500" height="62"><br><b><i><big><big>To Reef Central</b></i></big></big>


Somewhere in the return plumbing there has to be air being sucked into the system. I'm assuming you are using flexible tubing for your plumbing, not PVC? I would guess there are some clamps that aren't quite sealed allowing air to be introduced into the plumbing. Just a guess....
 
Last edited:
Welcome to reef central cpages2,
If everything is tight..... 5 minutes isn't long enough to tell if the bubbles are coming from the pump or from what is in the tank. let it run longer and see what you get.
 
im nervious to keep in running because I was told that many micro-bubbles will be bad for the tank and livestock.
 
My guess too. Let things run for a couple of hours and see how things are then. A little bit of air in the pump goes a long way.
 
You just filled it and you have fish and inverts in the tank? The bubbles will not hurt them but the ammonia that is often seen in a new tank will. I hope you have plenty of ASW ready as it may take many water changes to keep things in check.
 
I recently moved from one house to another. I picked up this 90G tank to move everything into.

I brought my sand, water, rock, livestock, bio-balls, skimmer, etc... from old tank. Only thing that was new (essentialy) was the glass on tank and sump box.
 
A starved pump is known to cause miro bubbles. Make sure the input side of the pump is not restricted. Restriction on that end caused either by a partially closed ball valve, bend in the pvc pipe, extra long pipe, or clogged foam, etc. will create micro bubbles on the output side. How is your pump connected?
 
Back
Top