<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7893649#post7893649 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by BeanAnimal
Fisrtly, thanks for the link to the domes!
Secondly, (said with a smile) where in the world do you come up with the stuff? Horizontal components? Cycloids? Added turbulance?
I am not trying to be mean, but this is getting almost silly. Didn't you just try to say that bubble plates in tall skimmers were bad?
I didnt say that they were bad, just not as effective. And, FWIW, I was only talking about how the bubbles at the top, in the collection cup area would be effected, not the whole skimming process. The taller the skimmer gets, the more bubbles will disperse and the more turbulence will settle on its own as you go higher in the water column. Lets say you have a 6' tall skimmer... do you think that how the bubbles are moving at the top are going to be effected very much by a bubble plate down below? Maybe if the skimmer is 3' in diameter with 5000gph needlewheel pumps.... but with a 6-8" diameter it just doesnt do much. I wouldnt consider smjtkj's new skimmer to be so tall as to not benefit at all from the bubble plate, and I dont know how the other skimmer he has is built, so I cant compare. I can only suggest that perhaps in this case, the first skimmer was just so much more turbulent in comparison that the bubble plate does do something in smjtkj's new one (or just the design in general is better, perhaps due to other things like height, flow, etc... but those options werent presented at the time) Simply put, its a different skimmer so a controlled comparison isnt possible. The only way to know for sure would be to test it for a while with the dome, then again with a curved funnel, and see which works better.
Rich you are speaking of the brachistochrome problem that was btw postulated and solved by Bernoullis father and uncle and it really has no application here other than to confuse the issue.
Why do manufacturers not used domed neck? Why don't they port their pumps and refine their poor designs? Why do TVs come with awful color calibration? Rich, tweaks cost money. Most companies shove the bare minimum out the door. As long is it is a bit better than the competition, thats all that matters. Anything more is a money loser.
your point is valid, but its not like a dome would cost more to make than a funnel or curved funnel... they would cost about the same to make. Same process, same materials, etc. So I wouldnt consider it a 'tweak' as a fundamental design attribute that could just as easily be made one way or another.
I enjoy your posts and your critical thinking, but you can't just paste a science book into every conversation and use YOUR understanding of it to connect all the dots.
The important thing here is that the skimmer neck has no flat horizontal surfaces and is smooth with no cavities. Could it be refined with some study, obeservation, and application of science? Sure. Is it the critical component at this point? I guess that is up to smj.
But why would not having any flat surfaces be important? Is there any proof that that is bad? Not really when you look at it. So its really just YOUR understanding coming into play as well (just pointing out that although you may not agree or want to bother with any of my 'understandings', that those thoughts are based in your 'understandings'... so neither is more valid than the other when you look at it like that).
I think I related the potential problem of a domed neck rather well... The example of a kid going off of a waterslide is exactly what I am talking about. Imagine that the slide starts out relatively flat, then as the slide goes on, the incline becomes greater. The kid would start out slow, then accelerate at the end and by the time he hit the water, be going straight down into the water. This is really what we want in our skimmers, but with bubbles that rise of course. Slides that start out steep and then level out at the end send the kid across the water as he hits the water. This related to a dome skimmer in that the bubbles that rise into the dome hit the sides, dont slow down until the very top, but at that point they get discharged not upwards, but across the opening at the top after nothing has been done to slow their speed. You really dont want this in your bubble collection area. There is the possibility that the bubbles are just so slow that is doesnt matter... they just slow as they get to the top of the dome, and then just fall upwards over the edge... but then why not just use a flat plate?
I am not trying to be hard on you but these scientific forays and some of the assumtions and applications of science are getting hard to swallow and seem to be grinding away at all of these threads.
Can we knock the science down a notch so that the rest of the passerbys can follow along?