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Old 03-09-2006, 04:27 AM
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No, the linear measurement means how long of a distance the water can flow over.

Imagine a waterfall. It is 10 meters across. This is the type of measurement you want.

Now for your overflow, say you have a standard corner overflow, you have two lengths you have to add up for the total linear measurement.

Quote:
It's for drains. So that would probably mean "free flowing".
"Probably" is not a good term in plumging a reef. Leads to too many floods. That is why this calculator is dangerous. Good as a gernal guide though, a starting point better than nothing.

If you have 20 inches of water in your overflow pushing down on the drain, it is going to flow faster than if you have 5 inches of pressure.

Also you can get some suction/siphoning going, but that is not recommended.
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Old 03-09-2006, 11:54 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TheReefGeek
"Probably" is not a good term in plumging a reef. Leads to too many floods. That is why this calculator is dangerous.
In your first post in this thread you asked:
Quote:
Is it assuming there is pressure on top of the bulkhead or not?
The correct response from me should have been:
Hell no! There is no pressure on a drain bulkhead! Only the weight of any water that is on top of it.(Weight and pressure are two totaly different things.)

My reply with the word "probably" was just a nice way of saying "No pressure....... Only weight."

BTW, there's nothing wrong with this calculator IMO.
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Old 03-10-2006, 05:19 AM
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Ok, so does the calculator assume there is no weight for the flow rates it spits out then?

I am not a physics expert, sorry if I used the wrong terms.

In my basic knowledge of physics, isn't one of Newton's first laws f = m * a, or force = mass times acceleration? Force is aptly named as N, for Newtons.
And water having mass, being pulled down by gravity at 9.81? m/s squared, will create force. That force when partially blocked at a bulkhead would create pressure, pressure expressed as Newtons per square inch? Maybe there is no pressure right at the bulkhead, just the surrounding glass?

I'm not sure, I just think you can put more through a bulkhead where there is more water sitting on top of the bulkhead than if there is none?
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