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Old 09-03-2013, 09:23 PM
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asylumdown asylumdown is offline
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Soak the shaft and the impeller in some vinegar overnight, it might be enough to get them apart. I'd also check all your other pumps. The precipitation reaction that fried this pump will be tank wide, so there's a good chance the rest of your equipment is at risk for the same thing. This same thing happened to me once, and while it was my return pump that failed, I discovered how close to failure my skimmer pump, both Vortech's, and reactor pumps all were when I took them apart too.

Unless it's been many years since you cleaned your pump, enough calcium precipitation to fry it usually means something is off with how you're dosing. Is your mag extremely low/are you dosing too much/dosing calcium and alk in wildly different ratios?
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Old 09-03-2013, 09:38 PM
nerdz nerdz is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by asylumdown View Post
Soak the shaft and the impeller in some vinegar overnight, it might be enough to get them apart. I'd also check all your other pumps. The precipitation reaction that fried this pump will be tank wide, so there's a good chance the rest of your equipment is at risk for the same thing. This same thing happened to me once, and while it was my return pump that failed, I discovered how close to failure my skimmer pump, both Vortech's, and reactor pumps all were when I took them apart too.

Unless it's been many years since you cleaned your pump, enough calcium precipitation to fry it usually means something is off with how you're dosing. Is your mag extremely low/are you dosing too much/dosing calcium and alk in wildly different ratios?
Thanks for your input.

Yes, running dosers now and think you may be right about the precipitation. Also my 2-part dumps in a small camber of my sump were the return pump is... I'm wondering if this temporary high concentration is contributing to the build up?

Anyways, tank is a mess after this failure 9 days into my vacation. I'll have to reevaluate my doses and check over the rest of the equipment.
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Old 09-03-2013, 10:16 PM
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Originally Posted by nerdz View Post
Thanks for your input.

Yes, running dosers now and think you may be right about the precipitation. Also my 2-part dumps in a small camber of my sump were the return pump is... I'm wondering if this temporary high concentration is contributing to the build up?

Anyways, tank is a mess after this failure 9 days into my vacation. I'll have to reevaluate my doses and check over the rest of the equipment.
oh yah, that's definitely a possibility! Does your doser wait any amount of time between dosing? I'm using a profilux doser for my Alk, mag, and calc and it's supposed to be programmed to wait a healthy amount of time between dosing alk and mag, but sometimes it seems to dose them one right after the other. I've noticed on a couple of occasions that the pump for one seemed to start spinning before the pump for the other had even stopped. Depending on how turbulent the water is and how quickly it's changed over in that chamber, I can see that potentially causing problems. Even if it's spacing the dosings far enough apart, it's possible that just the act of adding one of the elements to a confined space like that is enough to momentarily alter the concentrations enough to drive a localized precipitation reaction with the elements that are already in solution. It would depend on how big that chamber of water is relative to the concentrations/volume of dosing solution being added and how quickly that water is turned over. At least you'll be able to tell pretty conclusively which it is by looking at your other equipment.
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