A
Anonymous
Guest
Randy,
Your article mentioned that calcium carbonate will tend to precipitate at heaters and powerheads due to the inverse solubility with temperature and the shift towards carbonate and I've got a few related questions specifically regarding powerheads:
I get very little precipitation on my heaters (150W), but a lot on my powerhead internals (7W, they tend to seize after about 4 weeks). From your explaination, it seems as if I should see more on the heater and less in the powerheads. Would the pressure drop at the impellor come into play here w/ regards to solubility? I guess it also is possible that the duty cycle of my heaters might be pretty low (haven't paid attention to them in a while).
Am I correct in inferring that a totally clean impellor will have a lower precipitation rate than one that has had only a cursory cleaning?
Thanks,
Ty
Your article mentioned that calcium carbonate will tend to precipitate at heaters and powerheads due to the inverse solubility with temperature and the shift towards carbonate and I've got a few related questions specifically regarding powerheads:
I get very little precipitation on my heaters (150W), but a lot on my powerhead internals (7W, they tend to seize after about 4 weeks). From your explaination, it seems as if I should see more on the heater and less in the powerheads. Would the pressure drop at the impellor come into play here w/ regards to solubility? I guess it also is possible that the duty cycle of my heaters might be pretty low (haven't paid attention to them in a while).
Am I correct in inferring that a totally clean impellor will have a lower precipitation rate than one that has had only a cursory cleaning?
Thanks,
Ty