seriously...its no big deal;
- 5x tank turnover = about 2300 gph flowing through your sump.
- make sure your skimmer is rated for about an 800 gallon tank, then just buy a pump according to what the manufacturer recommends for that skimmer.
Plumbing a tank is like setting up a suspension on a car, its such a dark art and hard to figure out the optimum setup. Not sure about your drain issue, im using two pumps at 2150 each and two at 1350 each pushing about 26" upward through 3/4" flex hose. My two drains are 1.5" and its flowing enough to feed more than 5000gal/hr. Its a little noisy but doing it. You have two inch that should do much more than 3500 and hour I would think.
Not really familiar with the vents near the end of the drain line design you have.
why not simply have vents on the top of your drains like in a conventional Durso setup? unless you faced air pockets without the vents in the end I don't really see a need for the vents down.
when things are solved I would rather have a tube extension to your drain so that the output of the drain sits 1-2 inches below water. That would minimize splashing sound as well.
As for recommended turnover rate I believe larger tanks could benefit from higher than 5 times turnover. the higher the in tank flow the more the need for higher turnover to efficiently suck all the floating particles. Also sometimes in tank pump positioning works against particles floating straight toward the overflow.so a higher turnover rate works best.
As for the skimmer argument it does have value to it but many times a skimmers input ends up sucking some of the already drained water, so a higher turnover might prove better for this as well.
How did the Durso on top work?I tried a new plumbing idea and did the durso on top of the sump instead of placing it in the actual overflow. I was thinking that a higher flow rate will help remove more particles and get collected in the filter sock so the protein skimmer works more efficient? Thoughts?
I wish I could add 2ft to my tank depth...looking great Wayne
WOW,
I just cant wait to see the endresult - its alreday AMAZING
Must follow this tread!
Best of luck
Peder
My simplistic understanding of any type of venting of water pipes is that the air has to enter behind the water, not after the water is already in the pipe. That means the opening for the air has to be above the point where the water first enters the pipe. That's why a Durso is done up in the overflow. I don't know if that kind of thinking helps explain it any better to you.Newbie Aquarist said:I tried a new plumbing idea and did the durso on top of the sump instead of placing it in the actual overflow.
My simplistic understanding of any type of venting of water pipes is that the air has to enter behind the water, not after the water is already in the pipe. That means the opening for the air has to be above the point where the water first enters the pipe. That's why a Durso is done up in the overflow. I don't know if that kind of thinking helps explain it any better to you.
Dave.M
One person's sucking is another person's zen![]()
LoL this made my day. I think I may have to add this to my list of notable quotes.![]()