![]() |
Use a Protein Skimmer for Freshwater???????
It might sound like a stupid question, but hey, what the hell.......
The wife and I just 4 weeks ago started our first sal****er reef tank, and I'm so impressed by the operation of the skimmer, that I wonder if anyone has found a way to use a skimmer for a freshwater tank?? Of course, it is obvious that freshwater doesn't foam the way sal****er does, just the same, I thought I'd pose the question....... Anyone care to comment? Thanks, Greg |
Use a Protein Skimmer for Freshwater???????
It takes a lot more to use a protein skimmer on fresh water than it does salt. Its just not cost efficieint and from what I have seen, they are big time expensive and not even anywhere like a sal****er protein skimmer. Aquatic Eco Systems sells skimmers for freshwater use, but theyare all geared to aqua culture and large fish farms with dense stocking ratios. IIRC prices start off around $1,800 for base model. On 13 Jun 2006 16:52:22 -0700, wrote: It might sound like a stupid question, but hey, what the hell....... The wife and I just 4 weeks ago started our first sal****er reef tank, and I'm so impressed by the operation of the skimmer, that I wonder if anyone has found a way to use a skimmer for a freshwater tank?? Of course, it is obvious that freshwater doesn't foam the way sal****er does, just the same, I thought I'd pose the question....... Anyone care to comment? Thanks, Greg -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
Use a Protein Skimmer for Freshwater???????
wrote in message ups.com... It might sound like a stupid question, but hey, what the hell....... The wife and I just 4 weeks ago started our first sal****er reef tank, and I'm so impressed by the operation of the skimmer, that I wonder if anyone has found a way to use a skimmer for a freshwater tank?? I can't see why they'd be needed on a fresh water tank. With all the partial water changes we do dissolved solids are removed. Or enough are removed to keep our fish healthy and thriving. Of course, it is obvious that freshwater doesn't foam the way sal****er does, just the same, I thought I'd pose the question....... Anyone care to comment? Yes. If you try it please post back and let us know if there's any benefit to using a skimmer for a FW tank. -- Koi-Lo.... Frugal ponding since 1995. Aquariums since 1952. My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö ~~~~ }((((({* |
Use a Protein Skimmer for Freshwater???????
As if people that keep sal****er do not do water changes? Pretty well bet sal****er keepers do far more water changes with or without a simmer than freshwater keepers ever thought of. Just one more assumption eh Carolyn? On Tue, 13 Jun 2006 19:35:12 -0500, "Koi-Lo" wrote: wrote in message oups.com... It might sound like a stupid question, but hey, what the hell....... The wife and I just 4 weeks ago started our first sal****er reef tank, and I'm so impressed by the operation of the skimmer, that I wonder if anyone has found a way to use a skimmer for a freshwater tank?? I can't see why they'd be needed on a fresh water tank. With all the partial water changes we do dissolved solids are removed. Or enough are removed to keep our fish healthy and thriving. Of course, it is obvious that freshwater doesn't foam the way sal****er does, just the same, I thought I'd pose the question....... Anyone care to comment? Yes. If you try it please post back and let us know if there's any benefit to using a skimmer for a FW tank. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
Use a Protein Skimmer for Freshwater???????
|
Use a Protein Skimmer for Freshwater???????
Lone_Gunner wrote in
: As if people that keep sal****er do not do water changes? Pretty well bet sal****er keepers do far more water changes with or without a simmer than freshwater keepers ever thought of. Just one more assumption eh Carolyn? It really depends on your setup. If you have a really good denitrafying system going most reef keepers will neglect their water changes terribly and cover their bases with supplements. |
Use a Protein Skimmer for Freshwater???????
"dc" wrote in message ... It really depends on your setup. If you have a really good denitrafying system going most reef keepers will neglect their water changes terribly and cover their bases with supplements. ======================= Which is what my old roomie did. I never remember her doing any water changes on her 55g salt water tank. She'd put some kind of beads (I can't recall the name) in a bag in her Heim filter she claimed removed all the impurities. She'd top the tank with distilled water. When she moved I inherited the tank and stand but she sold the other equipment. I have GF in it now. :-) -- Koi-Lo.... Frugal ponding since 1995. Aquariums since 1952. My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö ~~~~ }((((({* |
Use a Protein Skimmer for Freshwater???????
Thanks for the input, folks, I appreciate it. You pretty much confirmed my suspicion that a skimmer would not be useful in freshwater. Thanks again, Greg |
Use a Protein Skimmer for Freshwater???????
|
Use a Protein Skimmer for Freshwater???????
Yes, but Aquatic Eco Syystems still states that under the right conditions a protein skimmer can be used in a fresh water setup and they do make specific skimmers for fresh water use. They are advancing all the time in concepts for making a protein skimmer work in fresh water....and even though they do have some that work fine, they are kind of cost prohibitive for most. On Wed, 14 Jun 2006 19:06:16 -0500, dc wrote: wrote in news:1150325893.079471.162490 : Thanks for the input, folks, I appreciate it. You pretty much confirmed my suspicion that a skimmer would not be useful in freshwater. Good quality, fresh active carbon basically fulfils the role of a skimmer in a fresh water tank by trapping wastes before they have a chance to breakdown in the water table. Some people use carbon or similar chemical sponges in very small salt water reef tanks where skimmer use is not practical. Be aware that carbon will strip minerals and nutrients from your water that plants require and it will remove any medication, tonics, or slime coat replacers you may be using as well. It is also only good for 30 days or so before you have to throw it out in average circumstances, much less in high waste situations. I never use active carbon in my fresh water tanks unless there is something in particular I want to remove from the water. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:29 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FishKeepingBanter.com