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Paul B

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I figured out another reason why I hate to change water even though I made it much easier with pumps so I don't carry any water or do almost anything physical.
I roll a 30 gallon container near the tank and using a large siphon hose with a strainer on it, I suck out about 25 gallons of water. Then I use the other 30 gallon container with the new water in it and pump it into the tank. That is the easy part. But when I do that, I un plug the pump that runs the skimmer because I don't have a sump (they were not invented when I set up the tank and me and Noah never heard of one)
If I left the skimmer running the intake would be out of the water and the pump would run dry so I shut the thing off. Of course, when you turn off a 30 year old powerhead, it doesn't want to start up again so you have to remove it and convince it to run just a few more years. To remove it is not that simple as it sits inside my tank to the rear and is connected to this surface skimmer (pictured). That and the pump have to be removed from behind the rocks in one unit. I have a latch that I have to turn that disconnects it from the Bio Ball reactor that just site there for the coolness factor with nothing in it but brittle stars. It is like a brittle star hotel and I didn't have the heart to evict them so I leave the reactor on there above the water and that feeds the protein skimmer.
So to remove all this, I have to lift it straight up. The LEDs are up there so I naturally hit that and knock off an LED lens. It falls in the tank and hits the arrow crab on the head who immediately yells "INCOMING" and runs behind the rocks taking the lens with him.
So I take apart the pump and see that it is gummed up and the shaft fell away from the hole that is now enlarged so the shaft doesn't stay in there any more and is egg shaped so the armature hits the sides of the powerhead. I clean the thing and have to epoxy the shaft back in. While that is curing, the algae trough is now dry because this pump also feeds that and I can just about hear all the brittle stars in there screaming that they are drying out. They are inside the reactor so it is muffled. Now, every few minutes I have to pour water in the trough to shut the brittle stars up. The thing is also filled with amphipods but they are more patient and I can see them all quietly walking to the lower end of the trough where they can all jump, one at a time back into the tank.
I go outside to water the plants, take out the garbage, feed the "Koi" (10 cent goldfish) in the pond and by that time the epoxy is cured and I can put it back together.
I plug it in and it runs so I put it back in the tank, hook it all back up to the empty bio ball reactor, make sure the cords are neat, plug it in, and, nothing. No water flow, just nothing but irritated brittle stars who are now breaking off parts of their arms in protest. Now I can really tell the brittle stars are panicking and I try not to let them see that I am also panicking as I don't want to have to get my remaining 35 year old spare powerhead because I would have to make a bunch of modifications on it to make it work in this configuration. So I again remove the surface skimmer, disconnect it from the reactor, un tangle the cords, lift it out and again hit the LEDs, this time knocking off a soldered connection so the lights go out. Not to worry as I built this LED fixture and can easily fix it. Did I mention my wife just had a major operation on her back and has to call me approximately every 18 seconds because she can't do just about anything unless it is located 5' off the floor?
So I get the parts on my work bench and take it apart. Before I can work on it, I hear the brittle stars so I have to pour water on them. They are in the dark now and don't know exactly where I am. I take the thing apart and the stupid adjustment on the powerhead was closed so it was an easy fix. I put the thing back together, put it back in the dark tank, connect it to the reactor, re set the top part of the surface skimmer so it sucks water from the top of the water. Turn it on and it works. I couldn't see the brittle stars as it was still dark but I think they gave a standing ovation which was hard on their broken arms.
Then I got my soldering iron and fixed the LED. It still didn't light because I must have damaged that LED when I hit it so I had to "by pass" it with a jumper so I could get the rest of the lights on.. I epoxied on the two LED lenses that I knocked off and ordered a few LEDs to replace the ones that croaked. Now, three hours later all is well and I went out on my boat and made love to a couple of Harvey Wallbangers knowing that my fish, brittle stars and amphipods are all happy.
Bio Ball reactor, Empty like it should be (I hate those stupid bio balls)

Surface skimmer with powerhead made by "Christopher Columbus Powerhead Company"


Algae trough and LEDs

Workshop
 
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Paul B

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The "brass" valve is plastic but everyone asks me about it. I installed the solar panels myself as I was an electrician and they gave me a course in them. Any Jiboni could install them. I was the first one in my town to have them so the building inspector didn't know how to inspect them.
 
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Howell, NJ
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The "brass" valve is plastic but everyone asks me about it. I installed the solar panels myself as I was an electrician and they gave me a course in them. Any Jiboni could install them. I was the first one in my town to have them so the building inspector didn't know how to inspect them.

woah... No not anyone can install them correctly :).. i wouldn't want to sleep in that house lol...

it doesn't look like you are using any mid clips just a brace on the top of the panels...
 
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GARDEN CITY
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The "brass" valve is plastic but everyone asks me about it. I installed the solar panels myself as I was an electrician and they gave me a course in them. Any Jiboni could install them. I was the first one in my town to have them so the building inspector didn't know how to inspect them.
I'm a builder Paul and deal with different inspectors one thing always come to mind is what school did they go to cause have not found one that knows what he is looking at
 

Paul B

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woah... No not anyone can install them correctly .

I didn't say anyone could install them, I said and Jiboni could installl them, so if your name is Jiboni, you should have no problems. Those panels are snapped in on both ends and have set screws holding the clips in. They went through hurricane Sandy with no problems.
I also installed the top floor of the house, roof and everything under it.
They are secure and inspected.
As for inspectors. I was a commercial construction electrician General Foreman in Manhattan for 40 years. We only did large jobs such as building many 60 and 70 story buildings. I also did a lot of work on the Trade Center, Empire State Building and Chrysler Building.
In all those years I have never seen an inspector inspect anything important. They just count the panels or safety switches. Thats it. They are not electricians and never were electricians so they don't know much about what they are looking at except to count switches. I always thought that inspectors should really crawl around and look at some of the things I sweated to install but they come to the jobs in a suit and spend a couple of minutes filling out some papers, then leave. It is a rediculous waste of time.
The only time they inspect, is after the building burns down.
I used to do quality work and wanted it to be inspected as I was proud of what I did.
99% of what an electrician does remains hidden so people don't see the massive transformers or generators we install. I once installed a 37,000lb generator on the 22 floor of a building next to the Staten Island Ferry. I even designed the way it was hoisted up to that height and put in the side of the building.

Here I am hanging off the roof of the Plaza Hotel installing MH lights. That is snow covered Central Park below me. The other picture I am cad welding in a NYC garbage incinerator.

 

PhoenixOne

"Drugs are bad...mmmkay!"
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As for inspectors. I was a commercial construction electrician General Foreman in Manhattan for 40 years. We only did large jobs such as building many 60 and 70 story buildings. I also did a lot of work on the Trade Center, Empire State Building and Chrysler Building.

I always thought that inspectors should really crawl around and look at some of the things I sweated to install but they come to the jobs in a suit and spend a couple of minutes filling out some papers, then leave.

I used to do quality work and wanted it to be inspected as I was proud of what I did.
99% of what an electrician does remains hidden so people don't see the massive transformers or generators we install. I once installed a 37,000lb generator on the 22 floor of a building next to the Staten Island Ferry. I even designed the way it was hoisted up to that height and put in the side of the building.

Paul B, Thanks to your post, I now have a greater appreciation of the work you and others that goes unseen an unappreciated.

Thanks for doing your part that made our city what it is today! (did that come out right? I hope so, kind of a stickler for a well structured sentence. lol!)
 

Paul B

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I can't make a well structured sentence but I can build structures. If you look up at a building under construction and see all those workman up there, most of them are electricians as the conduits for the wiring go on the steel re-bar before the concrete is poured. If the electricians are not finished, they still pour the concrete and the conduits have to get chopped in later as we have deadlines and can't hold up a pour.
After a building is completed all the tenant sees are the lights and receptacles, not all the bus duct and massive switchgear that goes in the sub structure. Some of those transformers are as large as a house. This is lower Manhattan. The building on the right is where I installed that 37,000 lb generator on the 22nd floor. (I specialized in those) That is the darker floor you see with the set back. The generator had to go on the left side of that building and the building is set back 20' there so the thing had to be lifted on 3' thick "I" Beams like railroad tracks which we bolted to the structure of the building and then very slowly winched in. The crane we used was the largest mobile crane in the world and it took two other cranes to put it together on the site. At that time, about 25 years ago it cost us $75,000.00 a lift and we had to make 3 lifts. Some of that money was to insure the subway beneath the street where the crane was. I designed the way this was done and saved my company half a million dollars. We had 700 men in that company and I got a nice bonus.
(the Trade Center was to the left of the picture but this picture is new)


 
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