Thanks of the reply. I'll have to dbl check but it's the thin walled sch pipe. I would have went with a Ba but not enough room in a 5x6 tower overflow
Depends on where you got the pipe. If at a big box type store, or similar it is going to be cls200, if at a irrigation supply or similar it will probably be SDR-21. SDR-26 isn't common even with specialty suppliers.
not looking for better just looking for same control other than up size or down size of hole to adjust under sump I want the tubing to go down in overflow so it's not seen as this is a center tower overflow just wondering if the bulkhead would work and not leak with the slip in fit of tubing
There are only two ways to "fine tune" a durso, or other open channel modified standpipe, one is by adjusting the valve on the pump output, which controls the flow rate through the system, and consequently the flow through the drain system. This is how every aquarium drain system is adjusted. Two is to vary the pipe size/bulkhead combination; in most cases this can be a bit inconvenient.
The durso was invented to solve one problem: eliminate the water fall to the bottom of a corner overflow. The inventor, Richard Durso, by his own admission, had no idea of the physics governing the operation of the design. The physics are written in stone, and you cannot beat the physics. If the physics could be 'fine tuned' out of the durso, there would not be such a wide scale search for a better solution, and siphon systems would still be a rather secretive art. I am not trying to convince you to convert to a siphon system, rather explain how your drain system actually works, why it is limited, and why your proposed solution is best left as an idea only.
All the gimmicks/modifications, dealing with airflow, with these type of standpipes, still produce noise, and the quieter they are, the less stable they are.
I think you will benefit by reading the first few paragraphs of this article where it deals with standpipe basics. Again, I am not steering you to a siphon system (although that is the only real solution to durso standpipes.)
http://www.beananimal.com/projects/silent-and-fail-safe-aquarium-overflow-system.aspx
In terms of your propsed needle valve setup, I think you are getting carried away, overthinking it. To adjust how much air gets in the standpipe, you simply need a valve on top of the standpipe, rather than all the fancy tubing, down through the bottom of the overflow, to needle valve. Remember, the more you overthink the plumbing, the easier it is to stop up the drain.
Thus: (the air tubing is completely useless in a normal durso setup, it accomplishes nothing, serves no purpose.) I am not recommending that you do this, however.