The most common service call we get goes something like this: "We bought a belt skimmer six months ago and it's barely pulling anything out. The sump is still milky. Did we get a defective unit?" The unit is fine. The problem is that the customer's tramp oil isn't tramp anymore — it's emulsified, and a belt skimmer is the wrong tool for emulsified oil.

This piece walks through the diagnostic — a two-glass test you can do at any sample tap — and explains why the answer routes you to one of three product families.

The two-glass test

Pull a 250 ml sample of your coolant into a clear glass. Let it sit for ten minutes. Then look at it from the side, not the top.

FIGURE 01 · TRAMP OIL VS EMULSIFIED COMPARISON
FIG 01 · SAMPLE COMPARISON · LEFT: TRAMP OIL · RIGHT: EMULSIFIED OIL

If the oil has separated into a visible layer on top, you have tramp oil. A belt or tube skimmer will pull it out cleanly. If the coolant is still uniformly milky after ten minutes — no separation, no surface layer — you have an emulsion, and no mechanical skimmer in the catalog can do anything about it.

The belt isn't broken. The fluid chemistry has changed underneath it. That's a coalescer problem, not a skimmer problem.

The reason the test matters is that emulsions form silently. Six months ago your sump was tramp oil over coolant; today the way oil is leaking faster than your skimmer can keep up, surfactants in the coolant are bonding to it, and you're past the point where mechanical separation works.

What to do about it

The fix is a coalescer — a device that uses an oleophilic media to break the emulsion and let the oil rise out of it. The Zebra Z-17 coalescer handles up to 17 gallons per minute, fits inline with your existing coolant flow, and pulls out emulsified oil that has accumulated over months.

Once the emulsion is broken, a belt or tube skimmer keeps the cleaned sump clean. The two products work in sequence, not in competition.