Fishnfist: Yup those are the "Carlson" surges. Basically the surge tank is nothing more than an inverted U shape of piping, some opt for a 45 degree like the ones in the picture, I'm unsure if that actually helps anything.
What this does is as water fills that tank up, water inevitably fills up the piping, now the tricky thing here is the air that is trapped in the pipes needs to go someplace, that someplace is your tank. If you have your return pipe to your tank too deep then you're going to need a larger area above the surge tank pipes for the water to go, this is because there's more pressure that's needed to push that air out.
Once there gets to be enough water in the piping however it will start to siphon, this is what gets all surgie

It pulls the water out much faster than it can be pumped in, eventually draining most of the tank down to the bottom of the pipe to which you get a "slurp" and final gulp of air that usually ends up in your tank.
Does the other end of the pipe terminate in your display tank? Below or above the water line?
Below the water line, if it's above the water line a siphon can't form.
I looked at the bornerman one initially because it had the built in secondary overflow pipe.. Plus it doesn't rely on a siphon to start emptying.. It is mechanical with the float and all..
Basically yeah, it's a toilet flapper. The issue with these is that depending upon the height of the surge tank you use you'll need quite a bit of upward "force" to pop it open, usually more than one float ball. And regardless of which one you choose I would add the overflow protection, all you need is an urchin or something to wedge it's way into your surge pipe to ruin your day.