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Old powerhead maintenance

Paul B

NJRC Member
This powerhead has been running non stop since the eightees when they invented them. It has only stopped a a few times when the power was out.
Lately, if it stopped, I could not get it running again and I would have to take it apart and spin the impeller a few times to start it.
I decided today to do a little badly needed maintenance. Of course, I could always buy a new one, but anyone can do that. Part of this hobby is maintenance and repair.
The shaft was badly worn allowing the magnet on the impeller to contact the sides of the housing and the hole where the shaft attaches to the housing was egg shaped due to age and vibration. I epoxied the shaft in the hole so I could center it and I used shrink tubeing on the shaft where the metal was worn away. I also lubricated the shaft with food grade silicone. Now I know the shrink tubeing will not last 20 years like the stainless steel shaft but It will probably last a year or two. If not, who cares, I think I got my moneys worth out of this powerhead by now.
Besides I do have some stainless steel radio antennas which I could make into a new shaft, but that is a project for next year.
Now the thing runs perfectly.

That strange looking below it is my surface skimmer. I think I built that the same time I got that powerhead. I don't have a sump or any holes drilled in the tank so that "device" skimms the surface of the water and feeds water to the homemade skimmer which feeds the algae trough.
So that one powerhead provides surface skimming, protein skimming and supplies the algae trough.

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Doesnt look much different than todays. you said eighties i was picturing it to be the size of a pool pump! and you def got your money's worth on that one. Too bad all the other products in this hobby didnt last that long, that would be nice. The shaft was stainless, today its all about the plastics.
My first tank i had the rainbow lifeguard canister filters so i made my own surface skimmer too. i knew the film on surface wasnt natural so i made mt surface skimmer. Thinking i invented somethin, i seen them a month later when i got my first issue of foster smith!
 

Paul B

NJRC Member
Nick I have three of those same powerheads all of which are still running trouble free. The tiny tube worms living throughout the thing don't help with it's operation an those things have a skeleton that is akin to broken glass, very abrasive and I am sure is what contributed to the wearing of the shaft.
I don't actually remember buying any of those powerheads so they are probably the early eightees, we did not really have submersible powerheads in the 70s as far as I can remember. But I don't remember much
 
I was born in 79, so i couldnt help ya wit the 70's. hahaha. I give you a lot of credit for being in the hobby for this long
 
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