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Reef sumps by ESHOPPS
Mark Cooper wrote:
I used standard window glass, which my local hardware store cut to my specifications. For anyone else out there who cares to try this, keep one thing in mind. If you don't give explicit orders to the contrary, your glass supplier will make certain default decisions. Some shops will just cut the glass and leave it a bit ragged. Some shops will carefully grind the edges for safety, producing a rounded edge (this is especially true with thick pieces, such as those your order for replacement tank sides). You want the edges ground for a good glue surface, but you want them flat, not rounded. Make sure the shop understands that. George Patterson If there are obstacles, the shortest path between two points may be the crooked one. |
Reef sumps by ESHOPPS
This is just silly really, but not on the reef topic so I won't get into it.
Tankdoc "George Patterson" wrote in message news:iFo2h.7643$Wy6.7625@trnddc01... Wayne Sallee wrote: The difference is that a submersible pump like a powerhead works by giving an alternating magnetic charge. You will notice that when a powerhead starts up, it's a 50/50 chance as to which way it will spin, and if something gets stuck in there, like if you stick your finger on the impeller, you will notice that the impeller vibrates back and forth. Called a "stepper" motor. But a external pump like little giant, uses windings that are charged in order one after another, depending on the position that the shaft is in, because the electrical contacts on the shaft control the polarity of the electrical field being generated. Called a "squirrel cage" motor. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electri...ents_and_types George Patterson If there are obstacles, the shortest path between two points may be the crooked one. |
Reef sumps by ESHOPPS
"tankdoc" wrote in message ...
Ahh now I see what you are calling a vibrating pump, but the method of spin in what you are calling an external pump is not controlled by the shaft position, I think you are confusing a commutator with how an AC driven pump is controlled. Its of no concern to reef keeping really. You should know, though, that the Main Coolant pumps in a pressurized water nuclear reactor use, essentially, the same design as a power head, and they don't run backwards. If I stick my hand to stop the impeller on a power head it vibrates simply because its trying to run but cant, the next time the field comes by it trys again etc, so it feels like vibration. Again, this is way off topic and I'll drop it now. Powerheads can turn both ways, randomly... No direction is preffered from another one. |
Reef sumps by ESHOPPS
As Pszemol stated, the impeller *will* spin either way.
You obviously don't know what brushes are. You need to go back, and click on the link that George Patterson gave. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets tankdoc wrote on 11/5/2006 1:05 AM: This is just silly really, but not on the reef topic so I won't get into it. Tankdoc "George Patterson" wrote in message news:iFo2h.7643$Wy6.7625@trnddc01... Wayne Sallee wrote: The difference is that a submersible pump like a powerhead works by giving an alternating magnetic charge. You will notice that when a powerhead starts up, it's a 50/50 chance as to which way it will spin, and if something gets stuck in there, like if you stick your finger on the impeller, you will notice that the impeller vibrates back and forth. Called a "stepper" motor. But a external pump like little giant, uses windings that are charged in order one after another, depending on the position that the shaft is in, because the electrical contacts on the shaft control the polarity of the electrical field being generated. Called a "squirrel cage" motor. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electri...ents_and_types George Patterson If there are obstacles, the shortest path between two points may be the crooked one. |
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