Ken -
You're inventor spirit is working overboard

I do totally respect your opionion though, as your standpipe design has been very useful to myself and countless others.
Your comments are appreciated, but personally, I'd prefer a device that does not restrict flow with gears, and the turning assembly probably requires more torque than a SCWD-type of setup would provide - not to mention the motor-control ensures constant wave timing vs the low-flow/slow switching, High-flow/fast switching, both of which are intrinsically useless.
And I'm totally lost as to the point of your suggestions 2 - most people use two sea swirls along with some static outputs for their tanks, 4 suits my tank as more than enough outputs, 8 for those with larger tanks seems adequate.
sandwiching the motor would double the torque required by the motor - why would you do this?
your suggestion #3 - this would require you to either mount this pump + swiching device on top of your tank, otherwise you'd be having 4 outlets through more piping either from the floor up to the top of the tank (return pump), or from under the tank (closed loop)- dramatically increasing head pressure and drag - maybe I'm not getting you're design idea.....
musicsmaker said:
MadTownMax, do you know if the "revolutions" cause any backpressure? The concept seems similar to the Ocean Currents wavemaker. That device uses gears, and according to the info page at Marine Depot:
I'm not really the one to ask, Paul would know for sure, but I'm 99% sure that it does not have gears, it's just uses the water pressure to push it down, then an air pocket to lift it up when there's no flow through it.
The Ocean currents wavemaker is designed to turn with constant water flow - the revolution is made only to turn when given intermittent flow.
hope that helps