The deep notch weir teeth are by design. I assume that you've seen the Ghost overflow in person but may have failed to notice the amount of water above bottom of the teeth, the overflow is indeed surface skimming. The deep notch weir teeth is an additional safety measure to prevent an overflow due to any type of weir blockage. The water level will rise until the overflow resumes flowing and the blockage can be cleaned.
An extremely loaded statement that purports to justify the (inhibiting) factors of teeth in an overflow, all the while ignoring some very basic physics. "The amount of water above bottom of teeth?" Naturally when you are " damming up" your main display, the water in limbo, waiting to be turned over is going to rise. A rise up the slotted overflow does not equate to equal turnover as in a smooth weir design. So while yes, there is some surface skimming present, there is less than that of a smooth weir, and even less in a slotted overflow that is not full length.
The water level in Reef Savvy's tanks are slightly lower by design which helps prevent water from splashing out over the sides. If Felix or the customer wanted the water level higher, simple adjustments can be made. Eventually the magnetic weir cover may come in multiple teeth depths to quickly change the water level in the tank by simply changing the cover.
Personal opinion: a waterline in a display below 1" is unsightly. The beauty of the standard application of a coast to coast smooth weir BA is that you can run significantly more flow while keeping your waterline just below the rim. I also prefer a Eurobrace even when not structurally required, simply for flow allowance with no worries of spillover.
The water traveling through the bulkheads doesn't change characteristics of the skimming efficiency.
As it relates to the Ghost overflow, this is true: the surface skimming was already inhibited behind the teeth in the display well before it reached the bulkheads.
I completely agree! I went to MACNA with an open mind and there wasn't a tank there that was even in the same category as Reef Savvy. Reef Savvy's tanks were perfect! I had the opportunity to see many of the so called top manufacturers and I was very disappointed especially with AGE. The AGE tanks that I saw had uneven silicone and misaligned panels, something I didn't expect after reading so much about them. Actually, the DSA tanks were built better than the AGE. The Tanked guys weren't even close.
I haven't suggested that they don't make nice tanks and pay attention to detail, and am enjoying reading the current discussion on tank craftsmanship in general. The main intent of the thread was centered on the amusingly touted " Gamechanging New Overflow" that has been introduced to the hobby, the contrary reality of its design limitations compared to a standard Beananimal, and the associated provisional patent content.
You're crazy. If it was so easy Reef Savvy would have a competitor and right now there isn't anyone that can compete in quality. They also had the best aquarium stands on display that I have ever seen in person.
Again, they piece together some killer tanks, and their silicone skills are solid. The aquarium construction vs. tank construction topic is more of an aside, although an interesting one at that.
IMHO, you should have paid the difference for a Reef Savvy.
To offer an example from a single personal experience, I quoted my current main display ( 225, 3 sided Starphire, Starphire Euro, black back with 5 holes cut for a C2C Bean) through ReefSavvy as well as Lee Mar.
ReefSavvy: 3500
Lee Mar : 1700
Pane measurements were dead on, the bevels and holes are absolutely flawless and the silicone is clean.
Any speculation or conjecture on supposed value/ validation for that sizeable of a price differential, when it's literally the same calibre of beveled Glass( Starphire is a brand, diamond beveling is a standard glazier procedure), well I'll leave that
compelling argument to someone else.