TheFishTeen
New member
While designing my manifold for my upcoming system, I thought of something and it's really starting to make me curious. So say you have the average manifold: Pump feeds a whole bunch of ball valves (or gate's if your feeding a skimmer or such), and you've got your reactors, refugium etc. When you close the first ball valve, you are removing the feed to whatever is connected to it.
But, wouldn't the next valve (and all the proceeding one's) receive more water now that there is one less thing to feed?
An example would be if you have a return pump that does 2000GPH, and you have 4 returns, your getting about ~500GPH from each outlet. In the case of the manifold, you are closing one of those outlets therefore the water that would have exited that first outlet is now continuing and exiting the next ones over. If that is true, then that means you have to adjust all the other valves too, now that more flow is being forced into them.
In other words, closing one manifold outlet is creating a domino affect. Every other outlet is affected by the other.
Is this correct? If so, how could I prevent this, while still only using one pump?
But, wouldn't the next valve (and all the proceeding one's) receive more water now that there is one less thing to feed?
An example would be if you have a return pump that does 2000GPH, and you have 4 returns, your getting about ~500GPH from each outlet. In the case of the manifold, you are closing one of those outlets therefore the water that would have exited that first outlet is now continuing and exiting the next ones over. If that is true, then that means you have to adjust all the other valves too, now that more flow is being forced into them.
In other words, closing one manifold outlet is creating a domino affect. Every other outlet is affected by the other.
Is this correct? If so, how could I prevent this, while still only using one pump?