Entropy,
mikester covered my response in his...kind of. The big diff is that the water that passes by (unskimmed water from the surface) actually becomes harder to get out because it gets blended back into the water, and the skimmer has to work that much harder to get it out again (oxidation has to be repeated). In a way, the surface area of the tank is used to work in your favor and boost the skimmers efficiency. So then an even bigger skimmer, with higher turnover through the tank is needed to compensate because it has to do more of the oxidation on its own. This is purely hypothesis at this point...but it does have merit. I can see your tank is set up for how you have it, and redoing it would take some considerable thought. Hey, Im not trying to revolutionize, just perpetuate a movement. Maybe the next tank....LOL (you know there is always a "next tank" on the horizon with this hobby)
durango_doug,
well, thats why i made this thread. You could rework it (alot easier to accomplish in the planning stage). How about an eheim 1250 ($60, dead silent, reliable, and commonly found...should give you 150-200gph at 4' head). Then make the closed loop with the mag18. Dont cry, if it helps & FWIW, think about the more bang for the buck (not to mention watt) you will get from using your mag as a CL pump. Less heat into the tank too which these pumps are kinda known for. Less noise...less headache...that should dry up those tears pretty fast. Say hello to the EAP world of plumbing with 3/4" PVC. LOL. BTW, how do you spend $150 on 1.5" plumbing anyways? What...do you have 4 check valves or something?
edit: using your mag18 as a CL pump might be too much for a 90g...you had better split those ports off a bunch! Heck, a 1" spraybar along the whole back of the tank might even be pretty strong. Maybe a smaller mag...as the only real advantage I was thinking with the mag18 would be that it does have enough pressure to use eductors with (an 1800gph pump can be as low as 30some watts, but w/o the pressure...so we might as well use the pressure that the pump was designed for to some advantage, right? ie: use the 145watts to its fullest potential)...but that would turn your tank into a typhoon experiment. I would look into alternatives to the mag18 down the road if I were you. I have nothing but nightmares with mags anyways.