Heh I had no idea. Thanks man. I'll position it a little higher then.
Hi all, was hoping for some advice. I'm setting up a 900 gallon system and would like to go the bean animal route. I'm trying to size the overflow box and figure out how many bulk heads are needed.
Tank is 10' x 56" x 33" and my overflow will be an external box (current design is 60" long overflow). I was going to use a reeflo hammerhead for the sump ~5,000 gph) and current plan is a closed loop with eductors for flow (another 5,000 gph into the sump). I"m still researching the eductors but when sized properly, it looks like I could get ~25,000 gph water movement out of them.
Anyways, anyone able to make suggestions on what size pipe under full suction can handle 10,000 gph? I assume even though the tanks a monster, i would still want to go with the 3 pipe bean animal design?
oh, sump will be about 3' underneath overflow
Thanks!
The open channel should only go to full siphon if the dry emergency is clogged. It is the last failsafe.
anyone have any links to flow rates of different sized pipe under full suction?
20" isn't really that short - I don't have experience with setups like this, but I wouldn't be surprised if it caused problems.
You could try it and see how it works. If there is absolutely no way to avoid the horizontal run and it does cause isssues, one option might be to add a means to vent the air - perhaps a tee with a john guest valve or something similar. You could also have an upside down P trap taht would collect the bubbles and use the drain plug on it to rig some sort of vent. You would have to vent it manually, so it wouldn't be automatically starting, but it might work.
Edit- potential problemm with the solution I suggested is that it could entrain air rather than vent it. If it's down far enough, I thing the pressure gradients would be such that it would vent air, bit I can't be positive.
Might help to make it less horizontal with 45 degree els if you have enough vertical space.
The tee is only there for a clean-out except on the open channel where it also provides a way to connect the airline for converting the open channel to a full siphon in an emergency. Since you have a union there you don't really need that tee. That might buy you enough room to go from the tank to the sump on a 45 degree angle.
On another note - I can't see the three pics in your OP, so I can't see what you're doing about the other two BA drains. I also don't see any valve on the one you are showing so that looks like it's just the dry emergency?


Hi all,
Looking to do a Bean overflow on my 40b with 20l sump. Ideally, I want an external box with minimal intrusion inside the tank, similar to this. This is my first salt tank and i've never drilled before, so I don't even know where to begin as far as plans and dimensions go. Anyone ever done this same setup but with 1" PVC instead of 1.5"? If so, I would greatly appreciate pics on where you drilled, how far down, the spacing, etc.
Thanks!