i havent had any problems yet.knock on wood
and i do dose kalk.i did contact corlvue and there was not any recommended spare parts.
they havent had any issues with the pumps.
i was thinking of purchasing a impeller to feel at ease.
i will dissassemble pump and have a look at the impellar soon.ive only been running the pump for 3 months.
i do shut the pump off once a week and it restarts so no problems there.
i think coralvue should be made aware of this,im sure they would like to know of this
Sorry for your troubles Yogre. I might have a theory as to why this is occurring. I have my HY7000 throttled back (ball valve on discharge) by about ~30%. I'm wondering if the reduced flow might be resulting in loss of cooling and the warming of the impeller, shaft and bushing - I know this can result in increased calcium deposits.My HY-7000 has seized again, and I'm not scheduled to return home until Friday. Fortunately, thanks to FaceTime on my iPad and my wife's iPhone, I was able to talk her through moving the heating elements from the sump into the display tank to keep my animals from dying from the cold.
When I have more time tomorrow I'll post in Coralvue's forum to see if they have any suggestions, but for now this sort of reliability or lack thereof is simply unacceptable. I just don't trust this pump as a main pump.
I've been running a HY-7000 for about a year. I continue to have problems with the pump seizing due to mineral deposits in the bushing. I seem to average no more than about 6 weeks between seizes, requiring the pump to be removed, torn down and vinegar soaked to remove the deposits.
I run a CaRx (10dKh / 440Ca - tank pH ~8.0) but nothing is dosed close to the pump that I can attribute to this problem. I'm wondering if anyone else is seeing this?
Also, does the impeller separate from the housing plate? I haven't found a way to remove the impeller from the bushing/plate. I didn't want to force it as it appears the shaft is ceramic and likely fragile.
I'm considering purchasing a spare impeller to speed return to service as it seems it's always the impeller bushing that gets fouled, rather than the pump housing.
My apologies, i should have clarified that I have a 6' skimmer so it coudnt handle the back pressure of the column..it only raised the water in the skimmer about 6 inches from sump height(12") and that was with my gate valve almost all the way closed...It just didnt have any power under the pressure..I wonder if anyone is running it at a high head applicaton? I woud assume it would do the same thing as in my experience, but i could be wrong.
Sorry for your troubles Yogre. I might have a theory as to why this is occurring. I have my HY7000 throttled back (ball valve on discharge) by about ~30%. I'm wondering if the reduced flow might be resulting in loss of cooling and the warming of the impeller, shaft and bushing - I know this can result in increased calcium deposits.
An example of this is the use of MJ1200s in powering media reactors. As they are often restricted to optimize the flow through the reactor - the loss of flow (cooling) results in the impeller and shaft running warmer and can dramatically increase the amount and rate of calcium build-up and result in increased maintenance.
Instead of restricting the discharge, I'm thinking through how I can modify my plumbing to by-pass some of the discharge water back to the sump.
I'm to the point that I will tear down and clean the pump before travel just to avoid the risk of it seizing while I'm gone.
Garage - On what do you base this? Everything I've read indicates you should not restrict the input side of a centrifugal pump.The proper way to dial back a pump would be to restrict the inlet but most restrict the outlet...
Garage - On what do you base this? Everything I've read indicates you should not restrict the input side of a centrifugal pump.
I think I'm done with the HY7000...
I was adjusting flow in my tanks tonight, and did a sump check as I always do to make sure the sump will hold all the water that drains from the tanks. Despite the fact that I just stripped and cleaned the WaterBlaster when it last seized less than 30 days before - it failed to restart. Once again, the impeller was seized at the bushing. The impeller housing and magnet were spotless.
This pump has been in service since 2/2011 and has seized 5 times...
2/2/2012
1/8/2012
12/13/11
10/19/11
4/11/11
Of even greater concern is the time between failures is shortening. I can't even trust it will run for a month.
I'm convinced there is a defect in the impeller bushing. As it appears to be permanently affixed in the impeller bulkhead, I haven't been able to determine a way to inspect it closer. I'm also concerned that there is rust accumulating in the screw threads and on the screws.
Yogre - Any headway with Jeremy at CoralVue? If not, I guess I need to start researching other pumps.
... Have the bushings or impeller been replaced ever or just cleaned? Would love to see a pic of the screws rusting. All stainless in saltwater will get some very minimal light surface rust, usually from tooling or from using a steel tool on them such as a screwdriver....
How do the clear silicone suspension O-rings look on the bushings? ... Getting angry with it or fiddling with it over and over and posting about it is not a very good solution to your problem....