Super Reef Octopus XP 1000S hang on back cone skimmer

Posted on : 28-01-2010 | By : Ryan Gripp | In : Protein Skimmers, ReefBuilders

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The new Super Reef Octopus XP 1000S have finally hit North American shores. The XP 1000s is a hang on back cone skimmer that features a bright red acrylic finish. If you have a red Ferrari tank, it should match quite nicely. The Reef Octopus is powered by a Bubble Blaster HY 1000 skimmer pump that is positioned next to an acrylic sheet holding everything together. The XP series is different from the LX series that is available in either LX-1000 and LX-2000 flavors. While the LX is a boring square boxed skimmer, the XP series seems to be staying with a cone design. We would expect there to be additional models besides this one leaking out over the next few months. But we don’t have any other information besides the fact that these are on sale at Premium Aquatics for $325.99. Ferrari red anyone?

Cast your vote for the Reef Builders Readers’ Choice Awards: Protein Skimmers

Posted on : 30-12-2009 | By : Brian Blank | In : Protein Skimmers, Reef Aquarium, ReefBuilders

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when-skimmate-attacks

We have brought you plentyof new and exciting products in the last year here at Reef Builders and we are proud to announce the first ever Reef Builders Readers Choice Awards. We value your insight and great comments that make this site hum like a well tuned skimmer and we want to hear from you. Now you have a voice with our end of the year awards and the chance to vote for the most innovative products worthy of our readers’ honors. Our criteria is simple for these awards: the product must have been available to hobbyists for purchase in 2009 and you all get to pick! Below is the first category of the new protein skimmers. Make your choice or choices below and at the end, we’ll tally the votes and present the winners in a later post. If we happened to miss one you think is worth of consideration, add it to the comments below and we’ll put it in for consideration. Also we’ll look into the comments to get YOUR perspective when we announce the winners, so make sure to let us know why you think these products rock!

The polls will be open until next week with more categories coming soon. The winners will be announced on Friday, January 8.


EXtreme Reef cone skimmers showcase Israeli technology advances

Posted on : 17-12-2009 | By : Brian Blank | In : Protein Skimmers, ReefBuilders

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extreme-reef-israeli-protein-skimmer
A new line of cone protein skimmers by start-up EXtreme Reef are making a splash in Israel and should be making their way to Europe in the near future.  The company’s founders are R&D engineers in the burgeoning Israeli hi-tech market and hobbyists to boot. Their design took each advantage of we’ve seen from current skimmers in the market and, with their engineering background, worked on overcoming the weak spots through their own ideas and design. The cone skimmer design isn’t anything new in the hobby but these models use a morph of the traditional skimmer with that of a cone using a cylindrical base that transitions into the cone allowing for a larger reaction chamber. The company also appears to use their own pump designed exclusively for this application steering away from the industry norm of working from existing third-party pumps. The eXtreme Air pumps come in two flavors and look to be impressively efficient. The smaller X-air 750 averages 750 liters per hour of air intake with a 1,500 lph (~396 gph) water flow and sipping just 11 Watts of power. The larger unit, X-Air 1000 boasts 1,000 lph of air, 2,000 lph (~528 gph) of water at 16 Watts. Right now they have two models available the XR-LCC 150 and XR-LLC 180 with a larger unit coming soon (XR-LLC 230). The XR-LCC 150 sports the X-Air 750 pump and is rated for tanks up to 1,200 liters (~312 gallons) and measures in at 300mm x 160mm x 550mm (around 12″ x 6.25″ x 21.5″) with the XR-LCC 180 sporting the X-Air 1000 pump and measures 330mm x 190mm x 580mm (about 13″ x 7.5″ x 23″). The skimmers appear to include a unique gate valve with an extension on the handle to make adjusting easy from the top without having to play contortionist with your arm to get at it in your sump. The collection cup looks to be a pressure fit so removal should be simple. The skimmers are currently available in Israel with plans to start distributing in Europe soon. As of this post, we did not have information on pricing but will update as soon as it comes in. A big thanks to Moshe for passing on more info! More images and video after the break.

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Bubble Magus adds Eheim, Aquabee pumps to new cone skimmer line

Posted on : 09-11-2009 | By : Ryan Gripp | In : Protein Skimmers, ReefBuilders

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BM cone skimmer

Bubble Magus is getting serious about their line of cone skimmers. If you’ve been living in a cave lately, Bubble Magus is known for making copy cat designs, they are after all located in China. However, they have come to terms with one of their biggest complaints in what pump they use to power their skimmers. With their new line, expect to see Eheim and Aquabee pumps which are the bread and butter in terms of efficiency in protein skimming. We are told that these skimmers are still in production and it will be an additional few months before you will be able to get these skimmers on store shelves. Consider us interested.

Thanks Spy!

BM cone skimmer 2

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Bubble Magus adds Eheim, Aquabee pumps to new cone skimmer line

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Silica Dosing: reef blasphemy or another form of nutrient export?

Posted on : 30-10-2009 | By : Christine Williams | In : Protein Skimmers, ReefBuilders

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Polar ice diatoms, Dr. Gordon Taylor

Polar ice Diatoms, Dr. Gordon Taylor

It has been long held that silica in reef tanks is bad, very, very bad. We avoid beach and play sand like it’s poison because it is believed that silica will cause an undesirable diatom bloom: brown glass, brown gook on rock and substrates, and unhappy reefkeepers. But what if we could control this system and use it to our advantage…say, to increase nutrient export? Let’s take a look at some old data, some new data, and a controversial hypothesis regarding the intentional dosing of silica to our reef aquaria.

Diatoms take many shapes (the photo above, by Dr. Gordon Taylor of the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, my academic “home”, shows a collection of polar diatoms). It is well established in biological oceanography that diatom blooms occur when seasonal upwelling of nitrates combines with longer sunlight and warmer spring waters. These diatoms can exist as benthic coatings, like the brown coating we see in a newly cycling tank, but the bulk of them in the ocean are in the water column. Once the diatom bloom commences, nitrate levels drop precipitously until they can no longer support growth, and the diatoms are either eaten by zooplankton or fall to the bottom of the sea. One thing that is unique to diatoms is that they build shells out of silica, or “tests”, which are symmetrical and some of the most beautiful creatures you will find.

The Old Data: Because we have all learned the dogma that “silica is bad”, silica levels in our tanks are typically way below the level found in reefs (Randy Holmes-Farley, 2003 ). As a result diatom growth is silica-limited, so the diatoms are not performing one of their useful tasks—nitrate removal. The diatoms that do exist in established tanks are not only found as benthic coatings but throughout the water (many commercial phytoplankton products contain diatoms).

The New Data: Dr. Ken Feldman, a chemist at Penn State University, gave a lecture at MACNA XXI concerning skimmer efficiencies and skimmate production and quality. As part of the study he dried down and analyzed the minerals contained in typical skimmate, and largely there were no surprises—carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus. But one thing that struck me at the time was an unexpectedly high concentration of silicon. Because the skimmate was rinsed to eliminate all dissolved minerals, the silicon could only have been part of an organism—and here’s where the hypothesis comes in.

The Hypothesis:

  1. Skimmers are particularly good at removing planktonic diatoms, hence the high silicon concentration in skimmate.
  2. Diatoms in reef tanks are growth-limited by a lack of silica, but are good nitrate utilizers.
  3. We can dose silica to increase the diatom growth rate, the diatoms will utilize the nitrates in the water then get skimmed out, thus giving us a new way to control nutrient export.

Now of course this is merely a hypothesis and will need to be tested to prove its worth, but some anecdotal evidence leads me to believe silica dosing might be beneficial and at least do no harm. Dr. Holmes-Farley dosed silica into his tanks with no ill effect—in fact, he reported that the film that did aggregate on the glass was green and easier to remove than what we usually scrape off.  “The Grumpy Old Reefer” reports dosing silica as well, with no ill effects. The added benefits of silica dosing may be interesting as well—sponges also depend on silica, so they may also grow faster. We will have to compare skimmate and nutrient levels from tanks with added silica to control tanks to see if there is a measureable benefit

So…who’s going to be the first to give Silica Dosing a whirl?

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Silica Dosing: reef blasphemy or another form of nutrient export?

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