fishgate
Active member
I suspect that as long as the sump will hold the backflow when the power is off, Then you could run the water level considerably higher then it is. You may want to consider moving the the little blue mark that you're referring too.![]()
I don't know about that, let me see if I can find the scraper. It is stuck on pretty tight. If I could move it, that would allow me to have a higher sump water level.
960gph? This is what the sump came with and Eshopps rates it at 300gph. I don't have any trouble matching the flow. I do think that a lot of people size down the overflow siphon tube for more consistency. It seems there is always a bubble in the tube.
I can get it just about max flow. The trouble is balancing between return and discharge. The overflow is just not designed well enough to be consistent within different water levels in the tank. So even minor variances throws the balance out. A quart evaporates and the sump is out of balance again. Usually it is on the side of the pump returning more water than the overflow will discharge. I can tell due to all the bubbles in the tank!
Ah well. This is my first sump. Best to learn how they work now so when I get a "big" tank I know what to expect.