Sn4k33y3z;866034 wrote: Thanks for your advise! I learned a few things. One of which make me wonder, how often do skimmers get unbalanced and will "over skim"? I do not intend on adding a neck cleaner (so I think lol). You mentioned some other measures could be taken for preventing leaking risks with an external skimmer... Please do share.
I don't believe skimmers will overskim too often, but nearly everyone that has one has it happen at one time or another. For an external it can be a disaster/flood. With an internal, the bulk of the water goes back into the sump, but what usually happens is you get bubbles and water spray coming out through the vent holes in the skimmer lid, and you get salt spray all over the place in the sump area, which can be bad for any electrics you have under there, as well as being a general PIA to clean up.
One way of minimizing this is to use a skimmate collection container that has a float switch incorporated into it that turns off the skimmer pump if it fills too high. Avast Marine makes one:
http://www.avastmarine.com/ssc/do/product/proteinskimmers/Davy-Jones-Skimmate-Locker">http://www.avastmarine.com/ssc/do/product/proteinskimmers/Davy-Jones-Skimmate-Locker</a>
These type safeguards are great, but the only issue with them I see is that you can introduce a lot of extra fresh water into your system via your ATO if you have to wait until the external collection container is totally full before it turns off the skimmer pump. also, if you run a Nilsen, you can OD your system on kalk as well.
My collection cup is huge, so I really don't need an external collection cup, and I had a skimmer overfoam and spray water all over the equipment once, and so I incorporated a DA float switch into the lid of my skimmer. This avoids the issue of a lot of RODI being introduced and minimizes the risk of ODing kalk as well. If the skimmer cup gets too full, the float switch triggers an alarm on my RKE and shuts off the skimmer pumps.
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Another mistake I have made in the past with my internal skimmers is when I add water to the sump but forget to turn off the skimmer, raising the skimmer section water level, and the skimmer overflows because the water height in the skimmer section is increased. So I also have a float switch in the skimmer section of the sump, which when the water level in the skimmer section rises, it will trigger an alarm that turns off the skimmer pump.
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For an external skimmer, you could do the Avast collection container suttoff and/or do the skimmer collection cup float switch. You could also use one of the water alarms with a sensor under/next to the skimmer body that would give an audible alarm if trigered. There may also be ones that control an electrical outlet that could turn off the feed pump. What I would probably do with an external skimmer is have a shallow acrylic tray built or build one myself that has sides a few inches high that you could incorporate a float switch on, that the entire external skimmer would sit in. Then, if there is a leak anywhere in the external skimmer itself, the tray float switch would trigger an alarm, turning of the feed pump and the recirculating pump.
That was another benefit of an internal vs external skimmers I failed to mention previously: external skimmers generally use a
lot more electricity than an internal because most of them use a feed pump as well as a recirculating pump in the skimmer itself. Internals don't need a feed pump.