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Old 07-04-2006, 04:37 AM
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Red face See I told you so!?!?!? Opinions needed.

Hi All,

I've been running my first saltwater tank sumpless for about 3 months now and the constant oil slick problem is ugly and a real pain! Also, the huge AquaC overflow box (works good for bubbles, but not for the slick), the heater, etc. inside the tank takes up too much room and looks fugly as well. Therefore, I must come to the conclusion that... everyone who told me to go with a sump from the start was right!!! Argh! hehe Oh well, the damage is already done...... but I was thinking about going with a CPR overflow box and adding a small sump under the tank. Is it worth it to go this route or should I start again and buy a drilled tank? Starting again would be a real nuisance but the oil slick and lack of space inside the tank sucks. Anyone have any ideas? The tank is 38G (12" wide) so i'm sure I could fit a 10G sump under the tank. Thanks for your thoughts!

Bud
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Old 07-04-2006, 04:48 AM
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Its not the sump that will fix your surface scum problem. I have a sump and also have a surface scum problem. The reason is because my water return is below the water surface. To fix the surface scum problem, I added an aquaclear 200. The water from the filter is returned above the water line which breaks the water surface and prevents surface scum from forming. You don't really need an aquaclear if you have a powerhead or something set up close to the surface such that it can produce a lot of crashing waves. If you want to set up a sump, you can but you still need to place the water return above the water surface in order to prevent the surface scum from forming.

Having said that, you have an AquaC Remora which should have helped with the surface scum. I guess its because the water that is being returned is going into the prefilter box which prevents the water surface of the rest of the tank from breaking.

Last edited by Samw; 07-04-2006 at 04:57 AM.
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Old 07-04-2006, 05:00 AM
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We have a 50g with an external overflow as our tank is not drilled and a 13g sump underneath. We still have some surface scum if one of the powerheads has slipped and is not agitating the surface and moving water towards the overflow...we also have the prefilter box on our Remora Pro....yup they take up a ton of space...we were at least able to get the heater out of site...but nothing else. Both of our other tanks are drilled. To do it again we would only go with a drilled tank..they are the way to go but a big pain if you have a set up and want to change it..unless of course you go BIGGER! and just move stuff over! Our water doesn't move overly fast through our sump but if it did we worry about micro bubbles with the sump being so narrow...good luck...you can do it without a sump etc but....
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Old 07-04-2006, 05:04 AM
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I am going to go the other way and say that a sump would help you big time.

IMHO you do not want to break the water surface at all as that will just add annoying bubbles to the water.

First you should have a good strong powerhead close enough to the surface that you can see some serious turbulance in the water. (Not high enough to draw in air though)

Follow that up with an overflow that will pull all of the surface oil/scum into the sump where it is mixed and can be skimmed, etc.

If I had to guess why your skimmer is not working I would think that the input pump might be too far down from the surface to get the crud on top. It should only be an inch or so from the surface. (Just low enough to not draw in any air.

As far as a new tank goes, that is hard. If you can get an inexpensive overflow, then you might be ok. You can always add the Remora to the sump for now. The only problem is redundancy. a drilled tank will have more than one outlet incase one gets plugged.

Good luck and keep us posted!
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Old 07-04-2006, 05:18 AM
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True about the overflow sucking the scum away. I forgot that my system is set up reversed from the typical setup. My sump is overhead instead of below the tank. So my sump overflows into my main tank. Anyhow, here is the surface of my tank about 10 days after I removed the Aquaclear. Its yucky. But I've repaired the Aquaclear and put it back online tonight. it should clear up the scum in a few days.


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Old 07-04-2006, 05:18 AM
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I have had sumpless tanks since 92 and just set up my first sump 4 mths ago. To get rid of surface scum you need lots of surface action, an aqua clear hang on filter works great and it can double as a fuge. I've never had a problem with bubbles in the water from too much surface agitation, it's always been the skimmer that put bubbles in the water

*Edit* if I didn't have my sump in the basement and had to put up with it under the stand, I wouldn't bother having one at all, it would be a bigger pain in the butt then its worth
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Last edited by marie; 07-04-2006 at 05:23 AM.
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  #7  
Old 07-04-2006, 05:22 AM
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I've never had any bubble trouble when using a powerhead to agitate the surface water-we have a maxijet 1200 pointed at the surface right at the top of the tank...only microbubbles from water going through a sump with too few baffles...Samw UGH I'd be putting that AC back on your tank too..my surface scum is minimal~
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Old 07-04-2006, 06:05 AM
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Well, i've tried using powerheads to break up the surface scum, but I find that all it does is push it to the sides. It's really frustrating! Does a CPR-style overflow box skim water from the surface, or just below the surface?
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Old 07-05-2006, 03:53 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Samw
If you want to set up a sump, you can but you still need to place the water return above the water surface in order to prevent the surface scum from forming.
I don't believe that at all.......I have no returns above the water cause I don't like the sound of it......and I have never had scum on the water top......If your gonna go with a sump then all you need us enough water turn over to keep them scum away from the surface.....so in other words take the size of you water volume...Multiply it by 4 or 5 and that's how much turn over you will need!!!
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Old 07-05-2006, 05:05 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by KrazyKuch
I don't believe that at all.......I have no returns above the water cause I don't like the sound of it......and I have never had scum on the water top......If your gonna go with a sump then all you need us enough water turn over to keep them scum away from the surface.....so in other words take the size of you water volume...Multiply it by 4 or 5 and that's how much turn over you will need!!!

I mentioned later on that I forgot my system is reversed from the typical system. I don't have an overflow in my main tank thus you can see the surface scum from my pic. I didn't make that up. Basically, I'm saying that I made a mistake in my first post because my main tank IS like a typical SUMP and my sump is like the typical main tank.

Last edited by Samw; 07-05-2006 at 05:11 AM.
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