Yep your right. That's a cool idea.<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7462033#post7462033 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by god910
Now, assuming you wanted to keep the body short, and make say 4-6 fittings all "fire" at different times rather than 3 at a time as in the pic, it'd be just as simple as dividing 360* by the number of outputs and cut the wedge out the resulting angle correct? Basicly 6 outputs, each fire on their own, each 60* apart, so you'd only cut a 60* wedge out of the center piece right? I'm thinking basically this would keep you from having to keep from forcing 1200 GPH out of 1 or 2 holes to get a resulting wave, and constructive interference would actually give you a better wave result in the end. I'll try and whip up a pic of what I'm talking about.
No it wont stop. Think about it this way: Where the pump T's, the water can go two ways: down and up through the gearbox (which turns the gears) and out the hole, and just down and out the hole. Some percentage will go either way meet in the middle and then go out the hole. As long as the percentage that goes down and through the gearbox isn't 0 then the gears will turn and you will get alternating action. The only way to get 0 percent going that route is if the valve is shut off. If 50% is going that way it will just turn at 1/2 the speed as if 100% was going that way. I hope that made sense.
My other question is this, do you find that you have to worry about putting more water in the top than the bottom? You'd think that once the flow approached 50/50 the thing would just stop, then once the top inlet overcame that split it would start to spin backwards. Basically making it impossible to flow any more for the given pump. Moreso, the inlet flow being what it is will be the ultimate conveyor of how much water this puppy can swallow. I'd say 190% of the inlet flow would be about the stopping point?
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8101741#post8101741 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by sugarbaker
I'm wondering if you could post pictures of the gear box pieces... a little closer up (or higher res) than previously posted... I'm trying to see how the water coming in the bottom actually gets the plate (modified part) to turn. Maybe someone could go as far as making one from scratch? Just curious, thanks.
Steve
siskiou