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Old 05-18-2008, 10:31 PM
my3kidsdad my3kidsdad is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dabandit View Post
If any flow needs to be turned down it should be the skimmer flow not the flow off the pump side so a pump that pumps a little less than the skimmer is better than a pump that pumps more than the skimmer make sense? When they sell pumps its rated by head (length of vertical pump) now if you also run this through a partially closed valve it increases your head/backpressure to a point your pump cant handle. This is all based on the fact that you will have a flow control valve on both the in and out lines in your sump
So it is preferable to slow down the flow after the skimmer? Have I got that right?
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Old 05-18-2008, 11:12 PM
dabandit dabandit is offline
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yes,the supply line for your sump just after the overflow/skimmer.


a SLIGHTLLY weaker pump will acomplish this for an example say your overflow flows at 310gph a good pump to use would be a 300. Dont forget to account for head for example I have 4 foot of rise from my sump so my pump needs to pump 300gph at 4 foot of head.......its easier than it sounds lol good luck
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Old 05-19-2008, 06:59 AM
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Captainhemo Captainhemo is offline
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If you already have the pump that flows alot more than you need and you're worried about back preasure, just tee a line w/ball valve into the return and run it back to the entry section of your sump. You can then run your pump wide open and send any excess back through the sump
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Old 05-19-2008, 01:38 PM
my3kidsdad my3kidsdad is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Captainhemo View Post
If you already have the pump that flows alot more than you need and you're worried about back preasure, just tee a line w/ball valve into the return and run it back to the entry section of your sump. You can then run your pump wide open and send any excess back through the sump
That sounds like a good suggestion. So we divert a portion of the flow off the pump back to the sump entry point from a point just after the pump output. ok.
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