View Full Version : pump and drums
pmwebdesigns
May 11th 04, 11:47 PM
Okay, you guys that have external pumps and uses 55 gal drums are going to
have to help me here. My pump is suppose to push 1500 - 5400 G.P.H.
If I have the pump pulling from the 55gal drum to push water flow in the
pond, I was thinking if it max's 5400 how can I get the water to flow into
the drums being gravity fed fast enough without the drum going dry. I'm go
have 3 drums. One the settlement, one with loads of filter mat and the other
empty with a hair of filtermedia and this one will be the one the pipe from
pump pulls from. Also the pipe going to the pond I was going to have a
venturi thingie set up. Did I explain that? I am so tired.
Priss
RichToyBox
May 12th 04, 12:36 AM
If you do your plumbing with 4 inch pipe, there should be very little
difference in the elevation within each of the drums and they will not go
dry. If the pipe size is small, then you run the risk of having the pump
run dry. I have an external pump feeding from a bottom drain and vortex
filter and do not find that I have a problem.
--
RichToyBox
http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html
"pmwebdesigns" > wrote in message
...
>
> Okay, you guys that have external pumps and uses 55 gal drums are going
to
> have to help me here. My pump is suppose to push 1500 - 5400 G.P.H.
> If I have the pump pulling from the 55gal drum to push water flow in the
> pond, I was thinking if it max's 5400 how can I get the water to flow into
> the drums being gravity fed fast enough without the drum going dry. I'm
go
> have 3 drums. One the settlement, one with loads of filter mat and the
other
> empty with a hair of filtermedia and this one will be the one the pipe
from
> pump pulls from. Also the pipe going to the pond I was going to have a
> venturi thingie set up. Did I explain that? I am so tired.
> Priss
>
>
pmwebdesigns
May 12th 04, 01:47 AM
You don't have any pics of your pump and filter set up do you?
Priss
"RichToyBox" > wrote in message
news:Trdoc.73568$0H1.6717086@attbi_s54...
> If you do your plumbing with 4 inch pipe, there should be very little
> difference in the elevation within each of the drums and they will not go
> dry. If the pipe size is small, then you run the risk of having the pump
> run dry. I have an external pump feeding from a bottom drain and vortex
> filter and do not find that I have a problem.
> --
> RichToyBox
> http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html
> "pmwebdesigns" > wrote in message
> ...
> >
> > Okay, you guys that have external pumps and uses 55 gal drums are going
> to
> > have to help me here. My pump is suppose to push 1500 - 5400 G.P.H.
> > If I have the pump pulling from the 55gal drum to push water flow in the
> > pond, I was thinking if it max's 5400 how can I get the water to flow
into
> > the drums being gravity fed fast enough without the drum going dry. I'm
> go
> > have 3 drums. One the settlement, one with loads of filter mat and the
> other
> > empty with a hair of filtermedia and this one will be the one the pipe
> from
> > pump pulls from. Also the pipe going to the pond I was going to have a
> > venturi thingie set up. Did I explain that? I am so tired.
> > Priss
> >
> >
>
>
RichToyBox
May 13th 04, 01:27 AM
Sorry, got pictures of about everything else but filter system. If you
would like, I will try to take some and post them. The bottom drain is a
vertical piece of 4 inch pipe, going down into a deep spot in the pond. It
flows into the vortex filter with all 4 inch pipe. The outflow from the
vortex steps down to 2 inch pipe going into the shed. In a hole in the
floor of the shed, below pond water level is a "T" going to 2 sequence
pumps, one feeding a BBF-2 bubblebead filter, and the other feeding a 6
cubic foot bead filter. Each has its own return to the other end of the
pond. One return currently feeds a trickle tower, the other an upflow
gravel filter. The trickle tower and upflow gravel filter are scheduled for
replacement this year. Do to total length from one end of pond to back of
shed, it would take multiple pictures.
--
RichToyBox
http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html
"pmwebdesigns" > wrote in message
...
> You don't have any pics of your pump and filter set up do you?
> Priss
> "RichToyBox" > wrote in message
> news:Trdoc.73568$0H1.6717086@attbi_s54...
> > If you do your plumbing with 4 inch pipe, there should be very little
> > difference in the elevation within each of the drums and they will not
go
> > dry. If the pipe size is small, then you run the risk of having the
pump
> > run dry. I have an external pump feeding from a bottom drain and vortex
> > filter and do not find that I have a problem.
> > --
> > RichToyBox
> > http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html
> > "pmwebdesigns" > wrote in message
> > ...
> > >
> > > Okay, you guys that have external pumps and uses 55 gal drums are
going
> > to
> > > have to help me here. My pump is suppose to push 1500 - 5400 G.P.H.
> > > If I have the pump pulling from the 55gal drum to push water flow in
the
> > > pond, I was thinking if it max's 5400 how can I get the water to flow
> into
> > > the drums being gravity fed fast enough without the drum going dry.
I'm
> > go
> > > have 3 drums. One the settlement, one with loads of filter mat and the
> > other
> > > empty with a hair of filtermedia and this one will be the one the pipe
> > from
> > > pump pulls from. Also the pipe going to the pond I was going to have a
> > > venturi thingie set up. Did I explain that? I am so tired.
> > > Priss
> > >
> > >
> >
> >
>
>
Andrew Burgess
May 13th 04, 03:47 PM
"pmwebdesigns" > writes:
>Okay, you guys that have external pumps and uses 55 gal drums are going to
>have to help me here. My pump is suppose to push 1500 - 5400 G.P.H.
>If I have the pump pulling from the 55gal drum to push water flow in the
>pond, I was thinking if it max's 5400 how can I get the water to flow into
>the drums being gravity fed fast enough without the drum going dry. I'm go
>have 3 drums. One the settlement, one with loads of filter mat and the other
>empty with a hair of filtermedia and this one will be the one the pipe from
>pump pulls from. Also the pipe going to the pond I was going to have a
>venturi thingie set up. Did I explain that? I am so tired.
Hi Priss
You can calculate the head loss from charts like at
http://www.mdminc.com/friction_loss_chart.htm
For 5400 gph flowing into the drum, 100 feet of 4" pipe
will result in the water level in the drum being about 1/2
inch below the pond level whereas 2" pipe will stabilize at
about 12 inches below. This scales linearly so for 25 feet
of pipe the numbers are 1/4 as large. Fittings add to this,
see the chart. Fittings are speced as equivalent feet of
pipe so the calculation is:
1) add up all the feet of straight pipe
2) add the equivalent feet of fittings
3) read the pipe chart at the desired flow rate and pipe
size to see the head loss for 100 feet of pipe
4) figure the proportion for the feet you have (50 feet is
half, etc).
Also this is best case, don't forget things like clogged
filter media and intake screens :-)
Hope this helps
Andy
PS Or you can just use "Rich's Rule": You can't go wrong
with four inch pipe
~ jan JJsPond.us
May 20th 04, 06:29 AM
Priss,
Did you check out my filter design/diagram on my website? Similar to what
you describe below. ~ jan http://users.owt.com/jjspond/
~Keep 'em Wet!~
Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a
To e-mail see website
>On Tue, 11 May 2004 18:47:59 -0400, "pmwebdesigns" > wrote:
>Okay, you guys that have external pumps and uses 55 gal drums are going to
>have to help me here. My pump is suppose to push 1500 - 5400 G.P.H.
>If I have the pump pulling from the 55gal drum to push water flow in the
>pond, I was thinking if it max's 5400 how can I get the water to flow into
>the drums being gravity fed fast enough without the drum going dry. I'm go
>have 3 drums. One the settlement, one with loads of filter mat and the other
>empty with a hair of filtermedia and this one will be the one the pipe from
>pump pulls from. Also the pipe going to the pond I was going to have a
>venturi thingie set up. Did I explain that? I am so tired.
>Priss
>
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