Andrew_bram;271710 said:
I have only seen opinions as to which is better no hard evidence. I could see running wet and replacing salt water being good so it's like small water changes.
I tried this. My main issue was trying to keep up with the small top offs and gauging how much SW was pulled out in a day that would need to be replaced. In the end, it seemed like I wasn’t getting much benefit from a wet skim, and I was having salinity fluctuations as my ATO would top off the tank too much and slowly lower the SG through the week. My tank was FOWLR at the time, so I didn’t have any serious repercussions…but I wasn’t happy with the results
Andrew_bram;271710 said:
However does dark taking longer render it less effective.
I thought so at first, but now I disagree with that concept. I notice that when my tank gets a nice dark skimmate, I have much less nuisance algae and cyano issues in the tank. With a wet skim it seemed like it was just bubbling over a lot of water without actually pulling much gunk out of the tank. I think the key with pulling a dark skimmate and having effective nutrient export is simply maintaining your skimmer. Once it’s fine-tuned to pull out a dark skimmate, it doesn’t take much for your skimmer to stop pulling. Sticking your hands in the tank, not cleaning the neck often enough…next thing you know the skimmer isn’t pulling anything at all and is essentially useless. With a wet skim, you have more “margin for error” in that you will likely always be pulling “something” out, but I don’t think a wet skim is more effective than a properly maintained skimmer pulling out dark skimmate.
I have to dump my cup 2x a week and get a dark skimmate. You can barely see through it if you hold it up to the light, and I do have to make tiny adjustments (or thoroughly clean the neck of the collection cup) every once in a while if I notice that it stops skimming. Check out the video link below:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p6_t5ziZ3vU
I know…not everyone agrees with all of his videos, but he does make a seemingly valid point. The larger bubbles are incapable of lifting and removing very small particles of waste from the tank. A wet skim is likely not pulling that out…when you have very fine bubbles in the neck, from what I’ve seen, you do end up with a darker skimmate. FWIW I took the advice given in that video and have definitely seen some improvements after going with a darker skimmate…what I had been pulling previously was that tea color that he wasn’t satisfied with in the beginning.