I think that it is this first area, where all of these considerations are taking place, and I wonder if "we" are failing to consider the importance of the "second area", and the "dwell time" that is occuring there.
This was along my train of thought in addition this is where I think the whole turbulence issue comes into play. In many of our current designs the bubbles are moving at a very fast and turbulent rate and seem to finally setting or slow down when they rise up the neck. Perhaps you are right Barryhc in that this area is somewhat self-regulating.
perhaps we should concentrate more on detritus skimmers than protein skimmers (protein skimming would be a secondary effect of the detritus skimmer)? Or is there a better way to get the larger stuff out than oversaturated wet skimming?
I will be adding a large mechanical small micron filter to get a lot of that detritus out. Yes it's a pain to remove the floss every few days but well worth it in the long run.
However what we would like would be a "flosses" filter that captures detritus, large particles and possible proteins. Some thoughts on this are instead of having one skimmer, lets make it more than one. Lets create two or three "different" types of "BB" oriented skimmers.
Could there by any way to use buoyancy inside the body more effective? Once most of the particles are in suspension is there any way to ensure once they get sucked into the body (say skimmer) to force them up/out 99% of the time? Perhaps this is where more current, direction and bursts of air and wet neck design would be more effective.
:bum: