Azureef
New member
I have gotten back into saltwater recently and have a 55 up with LR only so far. I do not have a sump (yet?) and thus with a HOB skimmer I have no surface skimmer.
Tonight, as I sat and looked at the thin film that occurs naturally and pondered it a thought occurred.
Why do we skim this back into the water column vs. removing it?
Why don't we remove it from the system instead of mixing it up into the water column?
No doubt, once the overflow system is employed to "skim" this unwanted material, it is never seen at is merely mixed into the water column.
Then, one relies upon a protein skimmer and various other filtration methods to remove that unwanted material which would float on the surface if we did not use this type of system.
As it would seem there might be a quicker way to remove the material, I wondered... is hiding that surface material immediately by mixing it into the water column the best way to handle it?
As is such, with my non surface skimmer system (for now) I decided to use a small receptacle to skip that surface film completely out of my system instead of adding it to the water column.
I realize that there are other reasons for using a sump system... but is mixing the material that floats to the surface back into the water column really the best thing to do?
(perhaps the sump could be closed for a time, and allow a closed loop in the sump to allow for life and anything needing moving water to continue, while particulates are allowed to gather at the surface, and then completely removed from the system vs mixing them into the water column)
The next question is, does that film contain enough bad mater to warrant instant removal vs mixing?
All ideas, knowledge, and thoughts about the subject (links to scientific data concerning surface film) are welcome.
Good to be back btw.
Tonight, as I sat and looked at the thin film that occurs naturally and pondered it a thought occurred.
Why do we skim this back into the water column vs. removing it?
Why don't we remove it from the system instead of mixing it up into the water column?
No doubt, once the overflow system is employed to "skim" this unwanted material, it is never seen at is merely mixed into the water column.
Then, one relies upon a protein skimmer and various other filtration methods to remove that unwanted material which would float on the surface if we did not use this type of system.
As it would seem there might be a quicker way to remove the material, I wondered... is hiding that surface material immediately by mixing it into the water column the best way to handle it?
As is such, with my non surface skimmer system (for now) I decided to use a small receptacle to skip that surface film completely out of my system instead of adding it to the water column.
I realize that there are other reasons for using a sump system... but is mixing the material that floats to the surface back into the water column really the best thing to do?
(perhaps the sump could be closed for a time, and allow a closed loop in the sump to allow for life and anything needing moving water to continue, while particulates are allowed to gather at the surface, and then completely removed from the system vs mixing them into the water column)
The next question is, does that film contain enough bad mater to warrant instant removal vs mixing?
All ideas, knowledge, and thoughts about the subject (links to scientific data concerning surface film) are welcome.
Good to be back btw.