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#1
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![]() My husband and I are plumbing our new soon to be reef aquarium today.
Its a 110 gallon corner drilled 4 foot wide tank with a marinland tidepool2 sump I have no idea what kind of return pump I should get? how many gph? the sump says 300-600 gph but can I go bigger? the stand is 30inches and the tank itself is 30 inches so there is 5 feet it needs to pump up i'd like a lot of flow |
#2
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![]() the size of pump you'll need is restricted by your overflow. Both the overflow surface length and size of plumbing inside the overflow (diameter of the drain basically) will restrict the amount of water that can exit the tank into the sump. You don't want to have water pumping into the tank faster than it is exiting.
For example, I currently have a mag 12 (1200gph) running on my 90gallon tank. I have 12" of overflow length and a 1.5" pipe running into the sump. I find that even with 6-7' of return plumbing to the tank its almost too much for the overflow to handle. Previously I used a mag 9 (950gph) and it was fine however I went to the mag 12 because I was running a chiller at the time and the extra length of return plumbing slowed down the pump. I'd say you can likely run between 600 and 900 gph through your sump. You'll have to add powerheads to the tank in order to increase your flow as just having the return pump will not be near enough flow. Perhaps if you can provide more information on the diameter of the plumbing in the overflow as well as length of the overflow (or take a photo if thats easier) we can give you some better suggestions ![]()
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Christy's Reef Blog My 180 Build Every electronic component is shipped with smoke stored deep inside.... only a real genius can find a way to set it free. |
#3
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![]() the overflow pipe is 2inches and abour 25 inches long but under the tank before it hits the sump it drops to a one inch pipe
the return size plumbing hasn't been bought yet |
#4
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![]() ok so you're going to be restricted by the amount of water that can be put through that 1" pipe. So I'd say you should aim for about 600gph or so. Now you need to find a pump that puts out about 600gph after the 5 feet of head pressure.
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Christy's Reef Blog My 180 Build Every electronic component is shipped with smoke stored deep inside.... only a real genius can find a way to set it free. |
#5
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![]() off to the harware store
I read on jl aquatics there is a quiet one 4000 with 600gph at 6 foot head I think that one will work |
#6
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![]() Be careful with the Quiet One Pumps. I'm currently running a Quiet One 3000 and it doesn't restart after power failiures or interuptions. It did fine for the first month, but now, not so much. In my sump the water level rises quite a bit when the pump is off, which causes my skimmer to overflow like crazy into the sump when it restarts and the return pump doesn't.
I'm currently looking at bitting the bullet and switching to an eheim or something... |