marinelife
Active member
Unarce - great post!!
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7550931#post7550931 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by oligotrophic
Hi concept3, look forward to seeing the results, cool thing. The only point I would add is that when skimmer goes offline, 02 level may reduce. Just a point to consider...........Cheers
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7549821#post7549821 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by concept3
I'm gonna pull the plug on the skimmer .............................................................. The only thing I may be concerned about is the additional O2 the skimmer injects as bubbles.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7557899#post7557899 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Flatlander
So where is the reply,s to my posts from the turf scrubber alone advocates.Hmm, for some reason, I never seem to get many after posting. Seems to happen on a regular basis on these threads.
My thoughts on 02/co2 exchange regarding skimmers. Although its a common thought that skimmers provide the most o2, I found when experimenting with my tanks that the air mixing in large overflows & drain pipes had the greatest impact on my ph. The large beckett skimmer less.
I'm gonna pull the plug on the skimmer to see if I can get the corals to color up as well, I'll probably post up the results in a few weeks if I leave the skimmer unplugged. The only thing I may be concerned about is the additional O2 the skimmer injects as bubbles.
So where is the reply,s to my posts from the turf scrubber alone advocates. Hmm, for some reason, I never seem to get many after posting. Seems to happen on a regular basis on these threads.
I'm glad you brought up O2. Skimmers assist in this function greatly, particularly needlewheel skimmers.
[haha, I started laughing at that ... After reading the quote above and the the next sentence is that... that was humorous... to me...
ok, Im probably the only one.. so nevermind.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7562940#post7562940 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Amphiprion
The amount of CO2 and O2 exchanged from the aquarium is entirely dependent upon the overall amounts in the house. If your house is poorly ventilated, no amount of skimming or aeration will make a difference. The effects of photosynthesis are a different story altogether.
Mainly because not alot of people recognize what a Turf Scrbber is...
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<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7564151#post7564151 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by tacocat
True, but agitation (skimmers and surface) increases gas exchange. Why have both the algae in your scrubber/refugium and the display tank autotrophs in the Krebs cycle at the same time?
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7565922#post7565922 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Amphiprion
The Krebs cycle is active 24 hours per day--the photosynthetic cycle is not. Organisms (plant and animal alike) are CONSTANTLY creating carbon dioxide.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7565922#post7565922 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Amphiprion Regardless of gas exchange, if there is an already high concentration of carbon dioxide in the surrounding air, it will do you no good.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7567259#post7567259 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by G-money
Flatlander,
No one has experiences to contribute to the ATS topic because of 1.) the patent and 2.) subsequent invisibility of the product on the market. In order to employ one, you'd pretty much have to DIY. So stupid - to patent a product like 10 years ago that never really saw the light of day. That does the hobby alot of good.
Very good, I didnt think about that!!!If your house is poorly ventilated, no amount of skimming or aeration will make a difference.
I have no idea...Elaborate please. Why is that funny?
my softee tank lost almost all LPS with the skimmer on. could someone please explain why this is happening.
My point was it was turf scrubber this & that earlier in the thread, using reference,s. So I added my comments as an actual turf scrubber user and nothing?
Great post Gmoney... Color doesnt have a thing to do with health... unless its bleached... but I have seen VERY healthy BROWN sps corals... this just says that they have been in water with loads of disolved nutrients for their xoozanthellae (sp?) to feed of off....SPS corals are not doomed to die without a skimmer. Color is absolutely no proof of good health (one trip to a coral reef will show you that) or ensured success (as anyone who's had a colorful seemingly healthy coral RTN on them will attest). It happens....Not everyone keeps SPS corals in their tank for wicked colors. Some find them nothing more than a pleasing backdrop for the magnitude of life they can get to proliferate in their tank.
Agreed! Though, the combo of having to buy Carbon, phosphate media, nitrate media, refugium lighting, refugium tank etc... will probably outweigh the cost of a skimmer... and be much more trouble in the LONG RUN... some people just ... well... either are cheapskates that dont want to fork out that much money at once, or are just stupid thinking they will save money somehow... or dont relize what they are doing... or just are crazy and think its better to do more work and spend more money to remove nutrients manually!What is a skimmer really going to remove that a combination of carbon, ozone, phosphate media and algae can't? The answer is probably "not much", though I can't say for sure.
yes, and no affence, but most of the corals are... brown.Here is my old tank that was skimmer less for it's entire existence.
Again I say, " If more people knew what a turf scrubber was they might. "I also agree its a shame that turf scrubbers never became more popular
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7568582#post7568582 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Shawnts106
Great post Gmoney... Color doesnt have a thing to do with health... unless its bleached... but I have seen VERY healthy BROWN sps corals... this just says that they have been in water with loads of disolved nutrients for their xoozanthellae (sp?) to feed of off....
And no, not everyone keeps SPS corals for color... I have seen many brown acros that look beautiful!
yes, and no affence, but most of the corals are... brown.[/B]