ErikS
New member
That's exactly it, an overflow IS NOT a siphon. The speed of the water through a siphon is limited by the size of the pipe & the distance of the drop. In the case of an overflow you are actually forcing the water through the pipe - this requires air. If you're running the water at the speed of a 1" pipe dropping 2' then you're not running much water through the system (which is exactly what I said)Have you ever done a water change before and used a hose to siphon water into a bucket? No air in there, is there? If there was, you wouldnt have a siphon at all. If the end of the siphon hose is held under water on both ends, there is no noise right? AND the water would still flow at the highest rate because there is NO AIR in the line!
I'll agree on that one, restrict the overflow, reduces the amount of air required, reduce the noise. As long as you don't dial it back beyond the amount of water coming into the tank life is good. The emergency isn't a bad thing, if the main gets blocked then it will take over.Restricting the drain line to tune a stand pipe is not new. Adding a safety overflow is the new part that I have not seen
No, I said that the system IS getting air (it has to or it won't function). He's the one that said "no air", which is not possible.The overflow is getting air into it....its open. You are not talking about a closed box.
It's apparent you undertand neither physics or plumbing. It's not better than a stockman or duso, all that going on is slowing the speed at which the water hits the sump = okay for low flow.