<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=12578470#post12578470 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by daveverdo
I understand how a skimmer works, most DIY counter current and some recirculating skimmers control the height of the water column by adjusting the height of the overflow.
I will admit the recirculating skimmers shown above do have valves to adjust the height of the water column but not all.
The DIY Snailman design I mentioned earlier is one of the skimmers where the water column height is set by adjusting the height of the skimmer output. If the height of the skimmer output is lower than the top of the skimmer it will not overflow. If you look at my diagram there is a 3/4" feed and a 1" drain, both gravity driven. As long as the drain is larger than the feed there shouldn't be a problem (barring a clog).
Dave
I've looked at the Snailman design, but have not seen a CC skimmer in operation first-hand.
A couple of thoughts: The Snailman webpage I found (
http://www.hawkfish.org/snailman/skimmer101.htm) was last updated 7 years ago; long before the advent of many of the efficient, low cost, in-sump needle wheel skimmers that are available today. For what you spend in materials, you can get a great skimmer that works right out of the box. From what I understand, those basswood airstones gum up fairly regularly, again, adding another variable to the equation. If you're more into "set it and forget it", you may want to avoid the CC design.
From reading this thread, there appears to be a "communication breakdown".

I don't think that folks who have commented are concerned about your flow design through the sump and skimmer. The reason for concern is those infrequent times when the skimmer foams like crazy, popping the lid off of the cup and pumping lots of gallonage through the top of the skimmer cup!
If your skimmer is not in the sump, this overflowing cup will send the water on your floor. Even if you have some 1/2" tubing going to a collection container resting above (or in) your sump, it is possible for the skimmer to overflow through the cup faster than that tubing can carry the watery "skimmate" away.
I have only had my skimmer behave like this once, and I couldn't have predicted it. (I hadn't made any adjustments or changes to the skimmer. It sits in 9" of water in a sump chamber that does not fluctuate in water depth.)
Luckily, my skimmer is in the sump! I didn't measure the rate that the cup was overflowing, but I'd estimate is was more than 100 gph.
I know that lots of people have good luck w/ an external skimmer. Personally, they make me nervous for the aforementioned reason.
HTH