rwgarrison
New member
Something like this...
Looks like a flood waiting to happen to me. But folks are doing their own thing, deviating from the design, and they are welcome to do so. We cannot test each idea that comes along for flaws and possible issues. We would spend all our time testing these concepts and have no time for anything else.
The box is too small to start with. This type of system (internal/external) was designed 5 years ago. The basic layout and dimensions have been published in this thread several times. It was intended for a rimless tank, that has an external box that is 8.5" tall, and even with the top of the tank. There are no bulkheads between the internal and external. The system worked flawlessly. After all the fabrication work that went into it, the results where not worth the effort required to get there, and had I to do it all over again, I would not have bothered. It just is not worth it, and the goal (to save a couple inches at the top inside the tank) is rather ridiculous. In a nano tank where it would make a difference, this type of system (siphon) is a waste of time.
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As far as drilling bulkhead holes in acrylic the answer theoretically is as close as you want provided you have room to work. I prefer schedule 80 because of beefiness of bulkhead and the added cost is negligible in my opinion. I surely wouldn't use schedule 40 if I was drilling the bottom of my tank for a closed loop as well.
The other post the overflow position in my opinion depends how the tank will be setup.
I am in the process of having a 180 gallon 6 foot aquarium built and wanted to incorporate a beananimal system. I have been reading through the threads and have a couple of questions. Is the back glass the best place to build the internal weir and external overflow or can you use the side.
What are best dimensions to use for the internal weir and external overflow box. My plan is to have the internal weir built coast to coast along side pane or almost coast to coast if using the the back pane. The water would enter the external overflow box which I am also having built via 3 holes in the back or side glass. I plan to 1.5 inch bulkheads and PVC piping which flows down to my sump.
As I having everything built from scratch including the sump I wanted to incorporate best practices so any guidance would be appreciated.
As I stated in my previous reply, the dimensions of the overflow box depend on the plumbing (and the materials from which it is made. 1.5" bulkheads are pretty big. How much flow are you looking for? Does the picture I posted above help you at all?
Thanks everyone for your advice. My drain lines are planned to be 1.5” in the overflow box…my return lines are planned to be 1” in the upper right and left corner of the tank. The position of the return holes is why I can’t run the overflow “coast to coast”. However, given that the tank will be 7’ long, I suppose I could run it 4 or 5 feet if that would help? Does it help having more water in the overflow box…or less? Or does it not matter as long as the standpipe elbows are at the right height? Or does it help to have the downward facing standpipe elbows relatively close to the floor of the overflow box (like the ¾” distance in the drawing above).…to avoid junk settling on the floor of the box?
Regarding flow, the manufacturer of my tank tells me that each 1.5” bulkhead will drain about 1500 gph given my 6’ drop from top of tank to bottom of sump. Is that not accurate? Given that I’ll have about 250 gallons of water in my DT and another 75 or so gallons in the sump…and trying to achieve about 10X turnover per hour, that’s how I arrived at needing about 3000 gph. I also plan on Tee’ing off one of the drain lines to feed the refugium section of my sump. This is where I got the idea I might need to full siphon drainpipes running at 1500 each…….along with the one open channel standpipe and the one emergency standpipe. I also figured that if I end up needing only one of the full siphon drainpipes, or if having 2 causes an issue, I can just cap one off. Seems easier to cap one off later rather than drill one later! Am I way off in any of my thinking on this?
The drawing of hole dimensions was VERY helpful! So thanks for that. Can I ask if the pipes in the drawing were 1”, 1.25” or 1.5”? If the drawing reflects pipes that are smaller than 1.5”, then I guess I need to adjust a bit for that? Does anyone already have that computed?
Any harm in putting strainers on the ends of the standpipe elbows?
Regarding the Open Channel standpipe, does it help to install an Airline valve on that line….or is fine-tuning of the air flow not necessary with this design?
Thanks again for all the great ideas everyone…and your patience with all my questions!
See my reply above. Bean's system uses 1" bulkheads and flows over 2000 gphI was looking at 1500 gbh flow.
Having given this some thought I would like 1000 to 1200 gph flow....based on what you have stated I am assuming three i inch inch bulk heads should work?
Couple of follow-up questions on the BeanAnimal Design:
- Just curious....on the Siphon drainpipe and the Emergency drainpipe, why the use of the Sanitary Tee vs. an Elbow? I see why the Tee / Cap is necessary to construct the Open Standpipe in order to add the airline connection; but is it necessary to have the Tee for the Siphon and Emergency pipes? Is this for cleaning purposes? They are not absolutely required. Yes, they are for cleaning
- What's the difference between a Sanitary Tee and a regular Tee...and does the BeanAnimal setup require the Sanitary Tee vs. a regular Tee? A sanitary T has a curve to the side port. I use a regular T
- Regarding the John Guest adapter that gets screwed into the top of the Open Standpipe cap...what diameter John Guest fitting is recommended? The 3/8" BPT version or the 1/4" mini NPTF version? Recommendations on how best to tap the threads? They have drill bits that form a NPTF thread? I'm not sure, but I use a 3/8" and tapped it with a bolt.
- When starting up the BeanAnimal system for the first time, do you start with Siphon drainpipe valve wide-open and then reduce the flow gradually once the siphon begins...or do you start it with the valve restricted and then gradually open up the valve to get the optimum flow in the Open Drainpipe? Start with the siphon valve wide open. Gradually start closing it until the water level is about mid-point on the siphon elbow. Wait a bit for the system to settle. If there are still a lot of bubbles coming out of the OC, then open the valve a tad. If using a ball valve, it can be tricky to find the sweet spot
Thanks again everyone!