![]() |
A stupid question regarding protein skimmer
I run a rio protein skimmer and it is collecting good amount of "brownish" water in the cup. I was just wondering, the water that protein skimmers collect, is it just liquid waste or water from the tank with the junk? I do have to top-off with fresh water every 4/5 days due to evaporation but would also like to know whether skimmers removes some saltwater too.
|
Your skimmer will remove a small amount of salt. The amount is dependant on how wet/dry you're skimming, but in either case it's pretty much negligible.
|
So its actually very small amount of "saltwater" and mostly junk? Like, if I get a cup of brownish water, I don't always have to replace the tank with a cup of saltwater to maintain the same water level right?
|
No, you don't have to replace the skimmate with new water.
|
Thanks :D
Actually I am running a rio nano skimmer in my 20 long and its sucking up good amount of junk esp after adding few frags of softies (good that it has a big cup compared to some other HOBs) so thought whether or not I need to replace the same amount of water with saltwater. |
Just check your salinity. If you find the salinity has gone up by 0.001 add some freshwater. Make sure you are using a hydrometer that has been manually calibrated or a refractometer that you calibrated a few times per year.
|
Yah I do that :D
BTW did you refer "manual calibration of hydrometer" as checking the reading with freshwater? Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Ooooo...yah that's a good idea....but hopefully in sept I will be buying a refrac...they are pretty cheap in ebay :D
|
Yeah, you get what you pay for though. Sometimes you're better off looking for a better brand in the used classifieds. :)
|
Yah I do keep an eye out. Being a student (particularly an international one), I have to keep my eyes towards the cheaper side :P
|
Quote:
|
In my case, my whole 20long setup is all shiny and brand new (ah well, my scholarship's money just flew buy) except the light (I just couldn't spare another $150) and things are coming along just fine :D
And to keep the things even better, I removed everything "readable" from my reading table and kept the 20long on it :D |
Haha, good for you. I hope you enjoy it. :)
I should note, though that many people do use distilled or RO water to calibrate their refractometers and hydrometers with no problems, but I have seen inaccuracies with these methods, so it is not a way I choose to do it. I use calibration fluids (which are cheap btw). For all that matters, you could just put the calibration fluid in the hydrometer, though it would take probably half the bottle ($3/bottle). |
Thanks for the suggestion. I will do that once I get the refrac :D
|
All times are GMT. The time now is 10:42 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.