Rebuild and recovery of a dead tank

I'm still loving the skimmer. I'm glad I got the quick change head but also really happy I can remove the entire top with the flange thumbscrews to get a really good cleaning done. I'll probably do that about once a month. Get a good wipe under the flange. Also super happy to have the neck cleaner. I'll probably keep up with removing the collection cup at the quick change every couple weeks. So, I guess kind of alternate between removing via quick change and flange.

I cleaned out my skimmer last night. Been just over a week and not quite 2 weeks since last cleaning. And this is like the ultimate foaming beast. I'm still getting about 6 cups per day

And thick

Like upside down Dairy Queen Blizzard thick
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And this morning.
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That skimmer is a horse. I secretly want one....:D. I don't get hat production from mine, but I'm not feeding as much as you yet either so I'm sure that has something to do with it. But man, that thing pulls out some sludge!!!!

Corey
 
That skimmer is a horse. I secretly want one....:D. I don't get hat production from mine, but I'm not feeding as much as you yet either so I'm sure that has something to do with it. But man, that thing pulls out some sludge!!!!

Corey
It's far exceeded all expectations. I do feed a lot which helps. The SRO3000 came close but it was a wetter skimmate and much more inconsistent.

One other maintenance thing I do with the skimmer so far that seems to help is I get about 3/4's of a cup of rodi water, put in microwave for 2 minutes so its boiling rapidly, and the shove the skimmers air intake tube in it allowing it to suck it all up. I've been doing that about once a week or stretched out a few days longer. Seems to help.

Along with feeding a lot I also think the carbon dosing helpsb drive up how much it skims as its skimming out excess bacteria too which is perfect as its exporting out what the bacteria has consumed.
 
Yeah my load isn't that much yet. I have 25 or so fish in my 240. Most in at 3-4 inch range and feed them 2-3 times a day. But like you I run an ATS and dose carbon. Hope as I add more fish and food it'll continue to produce skim. I will tinker and get it more thick/dry once my load gets up there.
There is no doubt your skimmer is pulling out some crud though.

Corey
 
Here's that gorgonian looking much better
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That gorgonian has been extending its polyps like crazy and looks awesome. Growing some too. Though some may think its drab or boring as its a dull brown. I love it. I'd like to get some more gorgonians.

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I finally got around to getting the swabbie installed. The wiper just fit in there perfectly. I did have to trim the blade just slightly as there is a little edge on the bottom that I cut to get just above it and even along the entire neck.

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The original avast swabbie lid and the motor mounted right on top with nylon screws.
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You can buy just the motor and in the instructions you glue it to your existing lid after drilling a center hole for the shaft to go through. I had Jeff drill that center hole for me from the beginning. I don't want to glue the motor to the top in case I don't like it.

So out came the unibit I already had to get a pilot going and then used bits in the 1/4" 20 tpi course tap set.
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There is a rubber gasket that goes between
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All ready to go
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And gets the entire neck to the lip on the quick change fitting
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And here we go
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Love my swabbie! Best 114$ I have spent on the tank


Aaron
 
I agree!!! Where did you get them from? I want some so bad, but I know they don't all do well in captivity and so I refrain from buying most of them.

Corey
 
I agree!!! Where did you get them from? I want some so bad, but I know they don't all do well in captivity and so I refrain from buying most of them.

Corey
I got them from KP Aquatics. They are listed as common starfish. There's almost always a wait list. I signed up to be notified when in stock and as soon as I got the email I bought them before someone else did.
http://www.kpaquatics.com/product-category/starfish/


I first found out about them from this thread:
http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=2460978
 
I just posted this in another thread and its worth reposting



I would also suggest a CACFI along with GFCI

CAFCI will help protect your house from fire
GFCI will help protect you from electrocution

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And a good surge protector will help protect your equipment.

Individual one shown above. Tripplite makes some good ones.

Plus a whole home. None last forever and will need replaced eventually based on how many surges and intensity of surges they've been hit by. Surges can come from outside your home, not just lightening strikes, and from inside the home.

Eaton Ultra and SquareD hepd80 are a couple good whole home surge protectors.
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Plus having more then one circuit with life support spread across them. I have two additional circuits then what's pictured above to my main tank on the first floor with GFCI at the receptacles so its easier to reset them if tripped. Then the two shown in the picture above go to my basement sump with the GFCI at the breaker. Along with being a CAFCI. There are also AFCI breakers but don't protect against as many arc faults as a CAFCI.

And don't get confused by combination AFCI (CAFCI). That doesn't mean it combines GFCI with it. The packaging has to specify GFCI as well to support both CAFCI and GFCI. Sometimes called dual.


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Here's some visuals
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And CAFCI protects against both of these where AFCI only parallel
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Just snapped this pic for another thread. Figured I'd save it here too. I still need to get better wire management.

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I will be trying out 24/7 on the ATS LEDs for the first time. See what its like in two weeks. I just cleaned it off last night.
 
Getting to be heater season. I haven't put my heaters in the sump or setup the Ranco controllers since moving to the new sump location.

Before I would put my heaters plugged into my Ranco and the Ranco plugged into an outlet controlled by the Apex. The Apex I liked controlling the temp and use the seasonal chart for it as the Apex keeps the temp in a much tighter range in the tenths of a degree. The Ranco would be a failsafe and set at a higher temp.

Well, my 10amp outlets are all taken up and I have 2 500 watts titanium heaters now(used to be two 300watts) which each draw around 4.5 amps. The other outlets on the EB8 are 5amps each.

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That's either a fire hazard waiting to happen or a breaker pop at any moment.

So, I pulled out my spare Ranco (I've got like 2 or more of everything) and now one heater is plugged into one Ranco plugged into one outlet on one EB8 power bar and the other heater plugged into another Ranco plugged into another outlet on a different EB8.

Ranco_6_2
Fallback ON
Set OFF
If Outlet vHeaterOn = ON Then ON
If Tmpx9 > RT+5.0 Then OFF
If BMTemp > RT+5.0 Then OFF
If DTTemp > RT+5.0 Then OFF

Ranco_7_2
Fallback ON
Set OFF
If Outlet vHeaterOn = ON Then ON
If Tmpx9 > RT+5.0 Then OFF
If BMTemp > RT+5.0 Then OFF
If DTTemp > RT+5.0 Then OFF


vHeaterOn
Set OFF
If DTTemp < RT+2.0 Then ON
If BMTemp < RT+1.0 Then ON
 
I use one 800 watt on a single relay socket on my EB8. Love how well it keeps the temperature stable.


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