saltn00b
Active Member
2 things,
1) 2400 GPH is a bit high flow for a sump, most of your GPH should ideally be from your CLS. usually no harm done here, however if the microbubbles that would normally float up and fizzle out before going into the next sump chamber are not allowed that opportunity because of a mad stream current, then yes, those bubbles will simply continue through the system.
2) how far is the water dropping over the baffles? if the distance is to high of a drop, you will be constantly recreating microbubbles, no matter what you are doing to the bubbles before it.
here is the last chamber on my sump:
once the water evaporates and get to about an inch above the bulkhead, the water spilling over from the last baffle drops hard enough to cause bubble which promptly get sucked through, so i start to see little puffs of micro bubbles as a warning sign im about to run dry.
1) 2400 GPH is a bit high flow for a sump, most of your GPH should ideally be from your CLS. usually no harm done here, however if the microbubbles that would normally float up and fizzle out before going into the next sump chamber are not allowed that opportunity because of a mad stream current, then yes, those bubbles will simply continue through the system.
2) how far is the water dropping over the baffles? if the distance is to high of a drop, you will be constantly recreating microbubbles, no matter what you are doing to the bubbles before it.
here is the last chamber on my sump:
![](http://i48.photobucket.com/albums/f243/mikeg31781/Tank%20Upgrades%20Jan07/IMG_1087.jpg)
once the water evaporates and get to about an inch above the bulkhead, the water spilling over from the last baffle drops hard enough to cause bubble which promptly get sucked through, so i start to see little puffs of micro bubbles as a warning sign im about to run dry.