Another question it seems like there are differing ideas of what the siphon pipe should be in the overflow. Higher means less water in the sump if the return pump shuts off. Lower means more water movement in the overflow itself. I am inclined to go with higher and a small power to move the water around the overflow, but if I go lower and the pump fails the siphon can't pull in more water then is in the overflow correct? Once the pump fails the water in the DT will fall to just below the level of the inlet slots of the overflow tower correct?
To combat the collection of stagnant water in the flooded overflow, just pull the stagnant water when you do your water changes. Its adequate to keep the overflow water clean and it helps to encourage regular water changes.
That'd work too. It'd actually be nice if all the gunk collected back there and I could get it in one go. I'm probably not that lucky.![]()
I'm just learning about Herbie's and BeanAnimal's and still trying to figure the way to go. I have dual overflows close to each corner of my 96 X 30 X 30 that I just got. I have 1.5'' drain holes in each overflow as well as 1'' return holes. Is it possible to do the syphon drain on say the left overflow and the emergency drain on the right overflow? How much syphon flow would I get on a 1.5'' drain?
After reading through this, is the only concern with this setup stagnant water on the right overflow? If so, would drilling a few 1/16'' holes up the stand pipe of the emergency drain on the right overflow get water moving enough in that overflow to combat stagnant water? Just a thought and no idea if it'd be effective (or disastrous).
One thing to consider is that when you shut off the return, your overflows will empty into the sump down to the level of the lowest hole.
My thinking is that if 2 1'' siphons were to both get cloggged up for some reason, wouldn't it require a larger hole, the 1.5'', as a failsafe to support their flow? I've been reading through this thread and see several posters going with the emergency as the smaller of the two holes with the 2 siphons on the larger openings. Wouldn't it make sense the other way around, for failsafe purposes, or am I thinking about that wrong? Obviously the chance of both siphons getting plugged up at the same time would be very rare, but you never know.
With a siphon in each overflow, I shouldn't have to worry about water becoming stagnant either, right? Thanks ahead of time for feedback.
I DO NOT recommend tying the open drain line into the siphon line. The open drain line is mostly flooded in order to establish the siphon on the siphon portion of the shared line. If your single line gets clogged low enough, the emergency drain will fail along with the siphon and you will have a flood.