<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7858053#post7858053 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by spazz
hahnmeister it seams like all your trying to do is pick another argument. this thread is not a place to pick a fight. its a place to share ideas and information not get everyones blood up. it seams you do this alot. i have see you on other threads doing the same thing your trying to do here.
im sure alot of people told eddison that he could never make the light bulb.
taking a negitave stance on new ideas is just un-american. so please stop.
Why would you say that? You are one of the other people I know who would agree with the idea that bubble plates are not needed on skimmers that are taller/have multiple smaller pumps running. Sometimes a decent downdraft and downward pump discharge are better options, esp when trying to cram the outputs of 4 Oceanrunner pumps into a 10" disk. Im not trying to argue... it just seems that ever since you and Bill made some DIY bubble plates that there is a new fad where everyone wants to add a bubble plate to their skimmer even if its not a good idea.
So having blind faith in a design feature is more American? Being negative to new ideas isnt 'Un-American', nice try, but playing the patriotism card here doesnt work. Bubble plates are not new, and if anything, are a German implimented design feature (Bubble Kings, ATIs, Aquaconnect, etc..). They are implimented on pumps that are too large for shorter skimmers... pumps that if their outputs weren't diffused, the skimmer would be a stubby whirlpool. Keeping an open mind and questioning convention is more American than anything... its how this country was founded. Im not saying that bubble plates are bad all the time, just that they arent always the best solution. Cramming what seems to be 1200gph of bubbles and air to come out of a 10" disk (or less) might not be as good an idea as the way things are set up now... thats all.
Turbulence is made out to be this 'feared foe' of skimming, to the point that I think its being taken too far. Bubbles smash into each other on the way up after all no matter how calm the trip upward is.
Look at beckett and ETSS downdraft skimmers for instance. The injection/mixing columns where the water and air mix and the resulting froth travels downwards violently is actually considered to be 'dwell time'. The actual 'calm' moments that the mix might have are in the black box at the bottom of the bubble riser and some of the way up into the collection chamber. Its a short distance, and a violent passage, yet these skimmers can still pull loads of black, chunky, baby-pooh gunk from the collection cup.
Just something to think about... or perhaps next time it would be more American of me to not post anything if it doesnt agree with what others think...:jester: