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#1
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![]() Bring the whole pump to J&L. If you can't get the impeller out, then no point buying a new one. See if they can help.
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#2
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![]() I believe it's the shaft and impeller he can't separate.
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#3
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![]() Soak the shaft and the impeller in some vinegar overnight, it might be enough to get them apart. I'd also check all your other pumps. The precipitation reaction that fried this pump will be tank wide, so there's a good chance the rest of your equipment is at risk for the same thing. This same thing happened to me once, and while it was my return pump that failed, I discovered how close to failure my skimmer pump, both Vortech's, and reactor pumps all were when I took them apart too.
Unless it's been many years since you cleaned your pump, enough calcium precipitation to fry it usually means something is off with how you're dosing. Is your mag extremely low/are you dosing too much/dosing calcium and alk in wildly different ratios? |
#4
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![]() Quote:
Yes, running dosers now and think you may be right about the precipitation. Also my 2-part dumps in a small camber of my sump were the return pump is... I'm wondering if this temporary high concentration is contributing to the build up? Anyways, tank is a mess after this failure 9 days into my vacation. I'll have to reevaluate my doses and check over the rest of the equipment.
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#5
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#6
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![]() Thats correct, impeller comes out of body. Inner ceramic shaft is seized inside magnet.
I was able to push out the shaft using a clamp and a small rod as a drift. Man, was it welded in there! Scraped off all the rock-hard build up with a razor. Pump is currently running fine. If it to works I for the next few days I'll replace the impeller. Cheers
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#7
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![]() it's a much better idea to put it in vinegar. Even with a razor you won't have gotten it all, and the CaCO3 that gets left behind is like a magnet for more precipitation. On a smallish impeller and shaft like that, 45 minutes in regular old table vinegar would leave it sparkling and 100% free of any calcified build-up. You should do the same with your skimmer's impeller, and any supplementary water moving devices you have elsewhere in the tank, making sure to completely disassemble any parts that move against one another first. You will probably be surprised at how many bubbles start rising off things you didn't think were coated in precipitation.
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#8
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