Everything you need to know about skimmers is in an old thread of mine somewhere on here.
Snake is right. There are guidelines, its a bit more complicated than just running some water down a screen next to a light source.... but not much hehehe.
Snake: I know he says its good to 100 gallons but I don't really get that. he grows more algae in the T-5 setup than I do on my screen and mine is more than sufficient for my 120 with a 55g sump. Doesn't seem to add up. They are so powerful I almost think you could do with half as much as is recomended and still keep your trates and phos at 0. Not gonna try it, just sayin'
I haven't checked my trates and phos in my tank in approx a year. The scrubber does it's job, no point anymore.
Quick Guideline, using feedings:
Each cube of frozen food you feed per day needs 12 square inches of screen, with a light on both sides totaling 12 real watts. Thus a nano that is fed one cube a day would need a screen 3 X 4 inches with a 6 real watt bulb on each side. A larger tank that is fed 10 cubes a day would need a screen 10 X 12 inches with 60 real watts of light on each side. If you feed flake, feeder fish, or anything else, you will need to blend it up super thick, strain out the excess water, pour it into a cube, and see how many cubes it is. And for Nori, 8 square inches = 1 cube.
Quick Guideline, using gallons:
0.5 real (not equivalent) fluorescent watts per gallon MINIMUM [0.13 watts per liter].f; line-height: 18px; background-color: rgb(225, 235, 242); " />
1.0 real (not equivalent) fluorescent watts per gallon for HIGH filtering [0.26 watts per liter].
1.0 square inches of screen per gallon, with bulbs on BOTH sides (10 x 10 = 100 square inches = 100 gal) [1.64 square cm per liter]
2.0 square inches of screen per gallon, if vertical but lit on just ONE side. [3.28 square cm per liter]
4.0 square inches of screen per gallon, if HORIZONTAL [6.56 square cm per liter].
1.5 real (not equivalent) fluorescent watts per gallon if HORIZONTAL [0.4 watts per liter].
18 hours of lights ON, and 6 hours of lights OFF, each day.
Flow is 24 hours, and is at least 35 gph per inch of width of screen, EVEN IF one sided [60 lph per cm].
Very rough screen made of roughed-up-like-a-cactus plastic canvas.
Clean algae off of screen every SEVEN (7) days.
m: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px; padding-left: 0px; color: rgb(51, 51, 51); font-family: 'Lucida Grande', 'Trebuchet MS', Verdana, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; line-height: 18px; background-color: rgb(225, 235, 242); " />
Note: If your scrubber is 1-sided instead of 2-sided, you'll need twice the wattage (or you'll need to feed half as much) in order to make up for the inefficiency of 1-sided screens.