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evoracer

CAD Lights Skimmer Review - Initial Impressions (Pic Intense!)

Rating: 4 votes, 4.75 average.
Recently at Reef-A-Palooza 2011, I picked up a new CAD Lights Conical Protein Skimmer, model #TIA-1150.





Here are my initial impressions of the unit.


First the specs. From CADLights.com:
*5 Decibels of audible sound.
*1 Year Warranty covers the entire skimmer from top to bottom (including pump).
*Dimensions: 9.75" x 6.5" x 18.5"
*GPH: 375GPH
*Wattage: 20W
Load recommendations:
Light bio-load (150G)
Medium bio-load (120G)
Heavy bio-load (90G)


Retails for $249.99. These are made in Ontario, California, in house at CAD Lights using 100% American parts and materials.


I must say my initial impression are that of quality. They had these skimmers running at RAP, and although it was in a very loud room, even putting your ear up to the unit and your hand on top of the skimmer, I could not even hear it running or feel any vibrations. The bubbles in the reaction chamber were thick, dense and very small. For a small skimmer it has heft, a sign of quality in my opinion. The acrylic is thick and very well cast. The cone is truly seamless, and the craftsmanship is second to none. Visually it shows no flaws, no bubbles at any seams, and feels very sturdy.


The pump was designed in-house, to accommodate the custom pin-wheel impeller, also designed and made in-house.


The main structure is two pieces; the main cone body and the inner assembly. Removing four plastic screws allows the entire inner assembly to be removed from the unit giving access to the pump and bubble plate.


Water level inside the cone is controlled by a simple swedge-design. Turning the drain pipe off center reduces outflow and raises the water level.


Now for some pics:







Removing these screws gives access to the inner workings:



I literally disassembled the entire unit in two minutes using this:



Slide the volute out to remove the pump:




Broken down:



The custom pump:





And bubble plate:



The acrylic is nice and thick:



The swedge-design level control:





This weekend I hope to have it in the water pulling some nog. Updates to come!

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Categories
Equipment

Comments

  1. baker.shawn's Avatar
    nice! cant wait to see this thing pluged in!
  2. chuck's Avatar
    you just have to love technology advancements
  3. melev's Avatar
    Looks good and has a nice tight footprint for those with sump-constraints. I hope to read good feedback from watching it run over the next few weeks.
  4. evoracer's Avatar
    Got it in the sump tonight. Fits well in my current frag tank sump, will fit even better in the sump I have for my 60 shallow. That sump has a dedicated skimmer area I designed in. It is silent with no vibrations already, I will update when it breaks in and starts to nog.
  5. evoracer's Avatar
    Day 5 nogging a bit.
  6. evoracer's Avatar
    The bubbles are small and dense, and the head at the top of the cup is thick. So far so good!
  7. evoracer's Avatar
    Pic from last weekend. Skimmer is kicking butt! Especially considering the relatively light bio-load of the tank it's on.

  8. chuck's Avatar
    looks like you made a good purchase! I am going to need a small footprint skimmer myself.