3/4" drain enough for 120 gallon tank?

aaliotti1

New Member
View Badges
Joined
Oct 10, 2021
Messages
9
Reaction score
1
Location
monterey
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I'm setting up a used 120 g tank with a single corner overflow. The overflow has two drilled holes (1" and 3/4"), I'm converting it to a herbie style drain and running an over the top return. My question is, will the 3/4" drain and 1" emergency drain be enough flow for the 120 gallon tank? I also have a 40 gallon sump and have not purchased a return pump yet.
 

KStatefan

2500 Club Member
View Badges
Joined
Jun 24, 2015
Messages
4,113
Reaction score
3,990
Location
MHK
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Depending on the drop height a 3/4" in full siphon will flow quite a bit. What is your target turn over rate?
 

Pntbll687

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
Oct 4, 2017
Messages
2,087
Reaction score
2,603
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Here's one of the most referenced charts for flow rates
Assume Gravity to Low Pressure. About 6f/s flow velocity, also suction side of pump​
Assume Average Pressure. (20-100PSI) About 12f/s flow velocity​
Assume "High Pressure" PEAK flow. About 18f/s flow velocity*
ID
(range)​
OD​
GPM
(with minimal pressure loss & noise)​
GPH
(with minimal pressure loss & noise)​
GPM
(with minimal pressure loss & noise)​
GPH
(with minimal pressure loss & noise)​
GPM
(with significant pressure loss & noise)​
GPH
(with significant pressure loss & noise)​
1/2".50-.60".85"7 gpm420 gph14 gpm840 gph21 gpm1,260 gph
3/4".75-.85"1.06"11 gpm660 gph23 gpm1,410 gph36 gpm2,160 gph
1"1.00-1.03"1.33"16 gpm960 gph37 gpm2,220 gph58 gpm3,510 gph
1.25"1.25-1.36"1.67"25 gpm1,500 gph62 gpm3,750 gph100 gpm5,940 gph

3/4in pvc will flow approximately 660gph at full siphon when using gravity. The last 4 columns show possible flow rates with pressure added, don't concern yourself with these (I just couldnt copy and paste the columns we needed without the formatting changing).

With the 3/4 drain at full siphon, you'd be looking at a turnover of around 5.5x per hour. This is in theory, in practice your flow rate is probably going to be lower due to turns in the pipe slowing things down. It will also be lower if you use a gate valve at all. I'd be guessing you'll be in in the 3-4x turnover rate.

Is this enough flow? I don't know, but with the overflow that's in the tank, even if you went with a durso pipe like it comes stock with, you'd only get marginal better flow rate. You could always get reducer bushings for the bulkhead, and use 1" or 1.5" pipe and reduce it at the bulkhead, and then use 1" pipe after the bulkhead to try and get more flow through.

I think as long as the flow is enough for the heater to maintain a constant temp in the tank, then it's enough.
 
OP
OP
aaliotti1

aaliotti1

New Member
View Badges
Joined
Oct 10, 2021
Messages
9
Reaction score
1
Location
monterey
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Depending on the drop height a 3/4" in full siphon will flow quite a bit. What is your target turn over rate?
Sorry I’m pretty new to this, what should I measure to get the exact drop height ? I don’t have a target turn over rate, I guess more on the low side as BRS said a 3-5 times was plenty.
 

Pntbll687

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
Oct 4, 2017
Messages
2,087
Reaction score
2,603
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Sorry I’m pretty new to this, what should I measure to get the exact drop height ? I don’t have a target turn over rate, I guess more on the low side as BRS said a 3-5 times was plenty.

Drop Height would be from the top of the drain pipe to where it connects to the sump. You're probably somewhere around 30"-36" if it's on a typical premade stand you can buy from a store. The drop height can really add to the total gph especially when someone is plumbing a sump in a basement and you have 12+ feet of height the water will be travelling.

Just plumb the tank with a full siphon 3/4" pvc and the 1" emergency. Get a return pump thats controllable, probably a max of 2000gph if you wanted to run a manifold off of it as well. Get the water flowing and as close to where you want it with just adjusting the return pump. Use a gate valve on the full siphon drain to really dial in the overflow so it's super quiet.
 

slojim

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Feb 2, 2020
Messages
358
Reaction score
231
Location
League City
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
measure display tank water level to sump water level
also, just because you have a 3/4" hole, doesn't mean you can't adapt immediately to 1" pipe if you want to go up a size. I don't suspect that's necessary.
 

slojim

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Feb 2, 2020
Messages
358
Reaction score
231
Location
League City
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
sorry - corner overflow - I missed that - so if you corner overlfow level is below your display tank level, use that as your starting height like Pntbll687 said
 

Pntbll687

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
Oct 4, 2017
Messages
2,087
Reaction score
2,603
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
sorry - corner overflow - I missed that - so if you corner overlfow level is below your display tank level, use that as your starting height like Pntbll687 said
I just went from the top of the full siphon drain pipe, to the sump. I'd measure it the same if it were a overflow box on the back of the tank.

But I don't think OP needs to worry about drop height or get lost in the minutia of drop height adding X amount of gph when the result is going to be the same. He's going to end up with somewhere in the range of 600-900gph draining into the sump using the corner overflow.
 
OP
OP
aaliotti1

aaliotti1

New Member
View Badges
Joined
Oct 10, 2021
Messages
9
Reaction score
1
Location
monterey
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Here's one of the most referenced charts for flow rates
Assume Gravity to Low Pressure. About 6f/s flow velocity, also suction side of pump​
Assume Average Pressure. (20-100PSI) About 12f/s flow velocity​
Assume "High Pressure" PEAK flow. About 18f/s flow velocity*
ID
(range)​
OD​
GPM
(with minimal pressure loss & noise)​
GPH
(with minimal pressure loss & noise)​
GPM
(with minimal pressure loss & noise)​
GPH
(with minimal pressure loss & noise)​
GPM
(with significant pressure loss & noise)​
GPH
(with significant pressure loss & noise)​
1/2".50-.60".85"7 gpm420 gph14 gpm840 gph21 gpm1,260 gph
3/4".75-.85"1.06"11 gpm660 gph23 gpm1,410 gph36 gpm2,160 gph
1"1.00-1.03"1.33"16 gpm960 gph37 gpm2,220 gph58 gpm3,510 gph
1.25"1.25-1.36"1.67"25 gpm1,500 gph62 gpm3,750 gph100 gpm5,940 gph

3/4in pvc will flow approximately 660gph at full siphon when using gravity. The last 4 columns show possible flow rates with pressure added, don't concern yourself with these (I just couldnt copy and paste the columns we needed without the formatting changing).

With the 3/4 drain at full siphon, you'd be looking at a turnover of around 5.5x per hour. This is in theory, in practice your flow rate is probably going to be lower due to turns in the pipe slowing things down. It will also be lower if you use a gate valve at all. I'd be guessing you'll be in in the 3-4x turnover rate.

Is this enough flow? I don't know, but with the overflow that's in the tank, even if you went with a durso pipe like it comes stock with, you'd only get marginal better flow rate. You could always get reducer bushings for the bulkhead, and use 1" or 1.5" pipe and reduce it at the bulkhead, and then use 1" pipe after the bulkhead to try and get more flow through.

I think as long as the flow is enough for the heater to maintain a constant temp in the tank, then it's enough.
I did not think of that, So how much more flow should I be able to get by using 1” pipe and just reducing it at the bulkhead?
 

Pntbll687

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
Oct 4, 2017
Messages
2,087
Reaction score
2,603
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I did not think of that, So how much more flow should I be able to get by using 1” pipe and just reducing it at the bulkhead?
Maybe 10-15% more, nothing crazy.

I would honestly stick with straight 3/4" inch and make life easier on yourself. Don't get tied down with some of these numbers and how to get more flow through a bulkhead. The only flow that really matters is can your return pump match the flow through the drain pipe. Buy a dc return pump that goes up to about 1500gph and you'll have more than enough flow
 
OP
OP
aaliotti1

aaliotti1

New Member
View Badges
Joined
Oct 10, 2021
Messages
9
Reaction score
1
Location
monterey
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Maybe 10-15% more, nothing crazy.

I would honestly stick with straight 3/4" inch and make life easier on yourself. Don't get tied down with some of these numbers and how to get more flow through a bulkhead. The only flow that really matters is can your return pump match the flow through the drain pipe. Buy a dc return pump that goes up to about 1500gph and you'll have more than enough flow
Thanks, I told myself I would keep it simple haha.
 

outhouse

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
May 25, 2021
Messages
1,322
Reaction score
1,017
Location
Auburn ca
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
3/4 will handle all you can throw at it while still being quiet.

You dont need that much flow for a 120, I ran a 100 with a single 3/4 drain durso, for over a deacde and it was dead silent.

anywhere from 200-500 gph all you need with a small sump like that
 

Clear reef vision: How do you clean the inside of the glass on your aquarium?

  • Razor blade

    Votes: 126 59.2%
  • Plastic scraper

    Votes: 62 29.1%
  • Clean-up crew

    Votes: 76 35.7%
  • Magic eraser

    Votes: 36 16.9%
  • Other

    Votes: 63 29.6%
Back
Top