Well, I tried the method of putting a larger fitting on the drain side of an external overflow, and it didn't work out. It may be that I just couldn't find a fitting that was bery good for creating a vortex.
nonetheless, I went back to thinking about what was going on and how to solve it. I figure that even with a little vortex in a 1" pvc drain, the water flows in from all sides and creates a solid sheet of water from inside diameter to the center of the pipe....leaving no way for air to go in or out. So I figured maybe I could eleminate the vortex entirely and fix the problem. it worked!!
How did I do it? You're going to love this... I set a bioball on the top of the tube. I did notice that it made a difference in noise level, based on what direction I put it. I have the kind that's blue with round pins on both sides. if I put the pins straight up and down, it made it quiter, but when I turned them sideways, the noise completely went away.
nonetheless, I went back to thinking about what was going on and how to solve it. I figure that even with a little vortex in a 1" pvc drain, the water flows in from all sides and creates a solid sheet of water from inside diameter to the center of the pipe....leaving no way for air to go in or out. So I figured maybe I could eleminate the vortex entirely and fix the problem. it worked!!
How did I do it? You're going to love this... I set a bioball on the top of the tube. I did notice that it made a difference in noise level, based on what direction I put it. I have the kind that's blue with round pins on both sides. if I put the pins straight up and down, it made it quiter, but when I turned them sideways, the noise completely went away.
