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gng
August 9th 04, 04:00 PM
Please don't laugh at my question or suggest I need a shrink. After I
installed my new Sequence 7200 pump I started realizing that if the pipe
ever broke that this thing would pump my pond dry in about half an hour. My
question is whether there is enough water pressure in the line to burst a
pipe fitting (like on a sprinker system where a cracked pvc joint will
someday burst) or if the water running through the flexipipe is more similar
to water running through an open hose, meaning lots of water but very little
pressure on the hose itself.

Help! I can't sleep!!

Bill Stock
August 9th 04, 05:29 PM
"gng" > wrote in message
...
> Please don't laugh at my question or suggest I need a shrink. After I
> installed my new Sequence 7200 pump I started realizing that if the pipe
> ever broke that this thing would pump my pond dry in about half an hour.
My
> question is whether there is enough water pressure in the line to burst a
> pipe fitting (like on a sprinker system where a cracked pvc joint will
> someday burst) or if the water running through the flexipipe is more
similar
> to water running through an open hose, meaning lots of water but very
little
> pressure on the hose itself.
>
> Help! I can't sleep!!

Don't put your pump on the very bottom of the pond! Raise it about a foot
off the bottom, so if you suffer a catastrophe you won't drain the entire
pond. This will give your fish enough water to live in for a while and will
prevent your pump from sucking the muck off the bottom.

George
August 9th 04, 05:49 PM
"Bill Stock" > wrote in message
. cable.rogers.com...
>
> "gng" > wrote in message
> ...
>> Please don't laugh at my question or suggest I need a shrink. After I
>> installed my new Sequence 7200 pump I started realizing that if the pipe
>> ever broke that this thing would pump my pond dry in about half an hour.
> My
>> question is whether there is enough water pressure in the line to burst a
>> pipe fitting (like on a sprinker system where a cracked pvc joint will
>> someday burst) or if the water running through the flexipipe is more
> similar
>> to water running through an open hose, meaning lots of water but very
> little
>> pressure on the hose itself.
>>
>> Help! I can't sleep!!
>
> Don't put your pump on the very bottom of the pond! Raise it about a foot
> off the bottom, so if you suffer a catastrophe you won't drain the entire
> pond. This will give your fish enough water to live in for a while and will
> prevent your pump from sucking the muck off the bottom.
>

Alternatively, you could build a suction system using the same pump. Since the
pump is on the outflow side, you can put your intake anywhere you want, and
don't have to worry about sucking muck into your pump, or pumping the pond dry.

gng
August 9th 04, 08:39 PM
Great idea - thanks
"Bill Stock" > wrote in message
. cable.rogers.com...
>
> "gng" > wrote in message
> ...
> > Please don't laugh at my question or suggest I need a shrink. After I
> > installed my new Sequence 7200 pump I started realizing that if the pipe
> > ever broke that this thing would pump my pond dry in about half an hour.
> My
> > question is whether there is enough water pressure in the line to burst
a
> > pipe fitting (like on a sprinker system where a cracked pvc joint will
> > someday burst) or if the water running through the flexipipe is more
> similar
> > to water running through an open hose, meaning lots of water but very
> little
> > pressure on the hose itself.
> >
> > Help! I can't sleep!!
>
> Don't put your pump on the very bottom of the pond! Raise it about a foot
> off the bottom, so if you suffer a catastrophe you won't drain the entire
> pond. This will give your fish enough water to live in for a while and
will
> prevent your pump from sucking the muck off the bottom.
>
>

~ jan JJsPond.us
August 10th 04, 03:40 AM
You can get an automatic shut-off (mercury flow switch) thru Aquatic
Eco-Systems www.aquaticeco.com When the water goes down, the bobber in the
water turns off the power to the pump. Saving both pump and fish, plus
possibly a lot of water. ~ jan

>On Mon, 9 Aug 2004 08:00:37 -0700, "gng" > wrote:

>Please don't laugh at my question or suggest I need a shrink. After I
>installed my new Sequence 7200 pump I started realizing that if the pipe
>ever broke that this thing would pump my pond dry in about half an hour. My
>question is whether there is enough water pressure in the line to burst a
>pipe fitting (like on a sprinker system where a cracked pvc joint will
>someday burst) or if the water running through the flexipipe is more similar
>to water running through an open hose, meaning lots of water but very little
>pressure on the hose itself.
>
>Help! I can't sleep!!
>

~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~