Hi everyone,
I'm fairly new to the hobby (1.5 years) and I decided to take the proverbial plunge and bought a 90g bowfront with a ~35g sump. I have a 1" drain coming from a durso that feeds straight down into the sump below. I have an external pump rated at 250g/hr at 6 feet to provide the tank return with a ball valve on the return side of the pump. Now, my problem . . . After turning on the pump, the water level rises faster than the drain can dump it - in fact, I have to turn the ball valve to 70% closed to reach equilibrium.
1. Will this eventually cause my pump to burn-out? After running for 1 hour, it's still cool to the touch.
2. Why is my drain so incredibly slow? The durso consists of a straight pipe (1") with 2 90 degree elbows on top to give it a "J" shape. I drilled two 1/4" holes on top of the elbow to prevent a suction. This feeds straight down into spaflex tubing and directly into the sump (i.e. no bends in the line).
Any ideas???? Thanks for the help!
I'm fairly new to the hobby (1.5 years) and I decided to take the proverbial plunge and bought a 90g bowfront with a ~35g sump. I have a 1" drain coming from a durso that feeds straight down into the sump below. I have an external pump rated at 250g/hr at 6 feet to provide the tank return with a ball valve on the return side of the pump. Now, my problem . . . After turning on the pump, the water level rises faster than the drain can dump it - in fact, I have to turn the ball valve to 70% closed to reach equilibrium.
1. Will this eventually cause my pump to burn-out? After running for 1 hour, it's still cool to the touch.
2. Why is my drain so incredibly slow? The durso consists of a straight pipe (1") with 2 90 degree elbows on top to give it a "J" shape. I drilled two 1/4" holes on top of the elbow to prevent a suction. This feeds straight down into spaflex tubing and directly into the sump (i.e. no bends in the line).
Any ideas???? Thanks for the help!