MD500_Pilot
New member
Hello everyone. I am a former reefer having had a 500-gallon reef tank for many years ago before we had more kids and moved homes which required me to get rid of my tank. Now that we are down to only four kids in the house it looks like I am going to try and setup a 210-gallon tank, but I have a very unique situation and wanted to get input from those of you much more adept at these type of things. I apologize in advance if this post is too long, but I am hoping that the collective knowledge here can keep me from making a big mistake.
So to start, I am looking at a 210-gallon tank with a bean animal style overflow. The main issue for me is where my sump will be placed will be about 30' feet from the tank. This is 30' horizontal feet, not verticle feet. This means that I will need to run four or five PVC pipes from my tank to the sump. Three for the bean animal, one for the return and one for the automated water change system I plan on building and programming with my youngest son.
Here is a very crude drawing of how the tank will be laid out:
I have done the measurements and I have a verticle drop of about 20" overall. I was able to pull a full siphon (albeit using a hose) over that distance with no issues.
So my main question is pretty simple. Can you reliably build a tank/sump in a configuration when the sump is not really below the tank, but in another room of the house entirely and with only a 20" difference between the bottom of the overflow and the top of the sump?
I was watching a bunch of videos (and really trying to understand the Hazen"“Williams equation, and this one did a great job of explaining the Bean Animal setup, but at the 5:15 mark, they start talking about the size of the piping saying that for 1500 GPH or less, use nothing bigger than a 1" pipe, but in looking at some flow charts for 1" PVC, that seems like it might be a bit small. This chart says that the max flow out of a 1" PVC pipe via gravity is only 600 GPH and I only need a 9" drop to get maximum flow:
However, this chart from FlexPVC.com seems to show that 1" via gravity will support 960 GPH as opposed to 600 GPH:
This link seems to support the 600GPH limit on 1" PVC as well.
Given that I will have a 210-gallon tank, I would need to target closer to 1250-1750 GPH (with 1500 being a good spot based on the pump I want to get) which means that I need to move to 1.25", but going back to the video, they seem to be saying that if you go too big on the siphon line you won't be able to get a full siphon. I guess I really only want to run this piping once and size it correctly all the way around.
For my return, I am looking at the Iwaki MD-100RLT. I calculated my head pressure to be about 21' based on 1' per vertical foot, 1' per 10' of horizontal piping and 1' per 90 connectors as suggested here. With the 100RLT and 21' of head I can get 1500 GPM with a 1" return line:
Does this pump seem reasonable for what I am looking to do?
I did try to run the head calculator here on reefcentral, but for some reason it would not work and gave me 8' of head pressure no matter what I put into the fields.
Lastly, I am concerned about my long horizontal run which in my case will be about 23'. According to this website, it says to avoid horizontal runs longer the 24" or I will have problems pulling a siphon.
So I guess my overall questions are:
Is it plausable to have my sump located in a different room than our tank with only a 20" verticle drop? I would think it would be ok, since if my sump were directly below my tank with a 20" drop it would work fine I would think.
Next, I am really confused as to the size of my piping. Based on some sites, they say 1" is enough for uto 1500 GPH, other sites say 600 GPH for 1" and yet others say 1,000GPH for 1". Because this piping has to go underground, I really only want to do it once and I would hate to put in 1" and not beable to pull a full siphon or worse not be able to get the tank turnover that I realy need.
I really appreciate any help or advice, as I said I would really like to get this right the first time around and be able to enjoy it for many years to come.
So to start, I am looking at a 210-gallon tank with a bean animal style overflow. The main issue for me is where my sump will be placed will be about 30' feet from the tank. This is 30' horizontal feet, not verticle feet. This means that I will need to run four or five PVC pipes from my tank to the sump. Three for the bean animal, one for the return and one for the automated water change system I plan on building and programming with my youngest son.
Here is a very crude drawing of how the tank will be laid out:
I have done the measurements and I have a verticle drop of about 20" overall. I was able to pull a full siphon (albeit using a hose) over that distance with no issues.
So my main question is pretty simple. Can you reliably build a tank/sump in a configuration when the sump is not really below the tank, but in another room of the house entirely and with only a 20" difference between the bottom of the overflow and the top of the sump?
I was watching a bunch of videos (and really trying to understand the Hazen"“Williams equation, and this one did a great job of explaining the Bean Animal setup, but at the 5:15 mark, they start talking about the size of the piping saying that for 1500 GPH or less, use nothing bigger than a 1" pipe, but in looking at some flow charts for 1" PVC, that seems like it might be a bit small. This chart says that the max flow out of a 1" PVC pipe via gravity is only 600 GPH and I only need a 9" drop to get maximum flow:
However, this chart from FlexPVC.com seems to show that 1" via gravity will support 960 GPH as opposed to 600 GPH:
This link seems to support the 600GPH limit on 1" PVC as well.
Given that I will have a 210-gallon tank, I would need to target closer to 1250-1750 GPH (with 1500 being a good spot based on the pump I want to get) which means that I need to move to 1.25", but going back to the video, they seem to be saying that if you go too big on the siphon line you won't be able to get a full siphon. I guess I really only want to run this piping once and size it correctly all the way around.
For my return, I am looking at the Iwaki MD-100RLT. I calculated my head pressure to be about 21' based on 1' per vertical foot, 1' per 10' of horizontal piping and 1' per 90 connectors as suggested here. With the 100RLT and 21' of head I can get 1500 GPM with a 1" return line:
Does this pump seem reasonable for what I am looking to do?
I did try to run the head calculator here on reefcentral, but for some reason it would not work and gave me 8' of head pressure no matter what I put into the fields.
Lastly, I am concerned about my long horizontal run which in my case will be about 23'. According to this website, it says to avoid horizontal runs longer the 24" or I will have problems pulling a siphon.
So I guess my overall questions are:
Is it plausable to have my sump located in a different room than our tank with only a 20" verticle drop? I would think it would be ok, since if my sump were directly below my tank with a 20" drop it would work fine I would think.
Next, I am really confused as to the size of my piping. Based on some sites, they say 1" is enough for uto 1500 GPH, other sites say 600 GPH for 1" and yet others say 1,000GPH for 1". Because this piping has to go underground, I really only want to do it once and I would hate to put in 1" and not beable to pull a full siphon or worse not be able to get the tank turnover that I realy need.
I really appreciate any help or advice, as I said I would really like to get this right the first time around and be able to enjoy it for many years to come.