Skimmer protocol?

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I have always ran my skimmer 24/7 and I always see people mentioning they keep theirs on a timer and only have it running at certain times of the year.

I was just wondering what is the "right" way to go about using your skimmer? I figured I'd give it a try and my skimmer is now only running 5 hours a day starting at noon.

Am I looking to far into this skimmer run time thing or are the pros & cons to the amount of time your skimmer is on.

Interested to see opinions thanks!
 
There is no right way on doing it. It depends on your tank and its behavior. If you have a ton of fish, you will probably have to run your skimmer all the time.

If you have a low bioload, you may not have to run it as much. Overall, I ran skimmer-less since I had low bioloads and wanted to keep my NO3 around 5ppm. Now I run it 24/7 as I have more fish and the bioload + skimmer keeps me at 5ppm's
 
There is no right way on doing it. It depends on your tank and its behavior. If you have a ton of fish, you will probably have to run your skimmer all the time.

If you have a low bioload, you may not have to run it as much. Overall, I ran skimmer-less since I had low bioloads and wanted to keep my NO3 around 5ppm. Now I run it 24/7 as I have more fish and the bioload + skimmer keeps me at 5ppm's

Got it! Thanks! Ya right now I've got 4 fish in 20g L but I'm moving into a 55g in about a month so just wanted to see if my skimmer "etiquette" was correct or not. I'll definitely be getting more fish when I go into the 55 but for now I think I'm at my limit for the 20!
 
IMO it depends on what you're trying to accomplish. If you're keeping a ton of "LPS" that prefer a little more nutrients in the water I would lean towards a skimmer cycle. If you're keeping a ton of "SPS" you might consider running it the standard 24/7.

With that said it's also going to depend on how much and what you feed, and what other methods you're implementing to remove nutrients. I feed my office reef really, really heavy. Fish are fed LRS 3-4 times/day, and I heavily spot feed my non-photos once or twice a week. I'm also pretty lazy when it comes to tank maintenance, so my skimmer runs 24/7 to pick up slack. There's no additional nutrient methods employed besides water changes.

Cherry Corals recently stopped using a skimmer on one of their "LPS" raceways and the corals have never looked better. However the tank has very few fish which are only fed a couple times per week (they're janitors). Their "SPS" raceway is still heavily skimmed with the same fish bioload.

A million ways to skin a cat ;)
 
I have tangs (crap machines) and run biopellets so my skimmer runs 24/7!
 
Ya but those are constant grazers though! I think I'd take the pay off of them pooping all the time for the cleanliness they provide! I feed a homemade food that is all organic that I get from a local reefer and all my fish seem to love it. He told me when they poop it's supposed to be so good the corals love it lol! I turned mine back on 24/7 I love the crystal clear water too much to risk it dirtying up!
 
IMO it depends on what you're trying to accomplish. If you're keeping a ton of "LPS" that prefer a little more nutrients in the water I would lean towards a skimmer cycle. If you're keeping a ton of "SPS" you might consider running it the standard 24/7.

With that said it's also going to depend on how much and what you feed, and what other methods you're implementing to remove nutrients. I feed my office reef really, really heavy. Fish are fed LRS 3-4 times/day, and I heavily spot feed my non-photos once or twice a week. I'm also pretty lazy when it comes to tank maintenance, so my skimmer runs 24/7 to pick up slack. There's no additional nutrient methods employed besides water changes.

Cherry Corals recently stopped using a skimmer on one of their "LPS" raceways and the corals have never looked better. However the tank has very few fish which are only fed a couple times per week (they're janitors). Their "SPS" raceway is still heavily skimmed with the same fish bioload.

A million ways to skin a cat ;)

Very Interesting.

That makes sense.

Usually everyone has their Skimmer going 24/7 but in some cases that is not the Best way to go about it.
 
I don't know which skimmer you are running but I had issues in the past with a skimmer pump that used to get 'stuck' after power loss and refuse to restart without a 'nudge'. I personally like running it constantly...
 
In my biocube29 I run 24/7 only because when I power off the skimmer my return pulls the water line from chamber 3 down low enough that it triggers my ATO which runs 30 seconds or more. It was causing my salinity to go lower then what I wanted. Haven't figured out how to resolve it either.
 

IF YOU HAD TO TAKE A REEFING EXAM, WOULD YOU PASS?

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