I'm an AIO guy, not a sump guy, but now I'm doing sumps. Here's my sump:
And here's the return from the sump into the DT (one return nozzle with random flow generator):
Note: I haven't put the tank into operation yet, just leak tested and starting to put in sand, water and rocks.
I understand that if the pump cuts off, purposefully or not, then the water in the drain tubes will go into the sump until no more water is going into the overflow, i.e., once the tank level is below the overflow box grates.
I've also been made to understand that the water in the return pipes will drop back into the sump in the return chamber, but that a siphon could form sucking water out of the tank and into the sump, potentially causing an flood in the sump. I.e., as gravity pulls the water in the return pipes back down to the sump, the displaced volume will pull tank water in the the return line that continues flowing into the sump until the water level reaches the opening of the RFG and lets air fill into the tube. Is my understanding correct?
Someone said in one of my previous posts and elsewhere that I've read that you drill a hole in the return pipes to prevent this siphon from happening. I don't understand where you would do that or how it would work during regular operation. Won't a hole in the return pipe mean that water pumped from the sump up the return tube would exit both the return RFG as well as the drilled hole, spraying water everywhere?
Sorry for the naive post, but thanks for the explanations!
And here's the return from the sump into the DT (one return nozzle with random flow generator):
Note: I haven't put the tank into operation yet, just leak tested and starting to put in sand, water and rocks.
I understand that if the pump cuts off, purposefully or not, then the water in the drain tubes will go into the sump until no more water is going into the overflow, i.e., once the tank level is below the overflow box grates.
I've also been made to understand that the water in the return pipes will drop back into the sump in the return chamber, but that a siphon could form sucking water out of the tank and into the sump, potentially causing an flood in the sump. I.e., as gravity pulls the water in the return pipes back down to the sump, the displaced volume will pull tank water in the the return line that continues flowing into the sump until the water level reaches the opening of the RFG and lets air fill into the tube. Is my understanding correct?
Someone said in one of my previous posts and elsewhere that I've read that you drill a hole in the return pipes to prevent this siphon from happening. I don't understand where you would do that or how it would work during regular operation. Won't a hole in the return pipe mean that water pumped from the sump up the return tube would exit both the return RFG as well as the drilled hole, spraying water everywhere?
Sorry for the naive post, but thanks for the explanations!
