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Bob Parkins August 11th 03 08:52 AM

Thinking of redoing my plumbing
 
Thinking about it...

Currently I have a separate pump running my chiller. For the sake of noise
I have it on the temp controller with the chiller. I know it isn't good for
the pump. My return pump is a Mag7 as well.

I was thinking, in order to eliminate the chiller pump altogether, (Marc's
Idea) .... of using a T off the return pump and diverting some of it to the
chiller.... and returning chiller water to the return area. (currently
pumped from return-chill-return & works nicely).

My concern is how much this might reduce the flow for both return (to tank)
and to chiller. Thoughts or ideas?



Marc Levenson August 11th 03 12:05 PM

Thinking of redoing my plumbing
 
Hi Bob,

My thought is for you to try it and see how it all runs. If you hate it, you
can upgrade your return pump to a stronger one, or switch it back to the way it
was. :)

Marc


Bob Parkins wrote:

Thinking about it...

Currently I have a separate pump running my chiller. For the sake of noise
I have it on the temp controller with the chiller. I know it isn't good for
the pump. My return pump is a Mag7 as well.

I was thinking, in order to eliminate the chiller pump altogether, (Marc's
Idea) .... of using a T off the return pump and diverting some of it to the
chiller.... and returning chiller water to the return area. (currently
pumped from return-chill-return & works nicely).

My concern is how much this might reduce the flow for both return (to tank)
and to chiller. Thoughts or ideas?


--
Personal Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com/oanda/index.html
Business Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com
Marine Hobbyist: http://www.melevsreef.com



wobble August 12th 03 01:28 PM

Thinking of redoing my plumbing
 
what pump have you got that pumps 3000 gallons per hour?


"Timothy Tom" wrote in message
om...
I guess the impact of sharing the primary pump output depends on the
primary pumps current flowrate. Most chillers require a minimum of
600 gallons an hour. If you believe that you can afford this loss of
flow, then I guess that sharing the pump output is an option. I just
installed a chiller in a tank with a primary pump which pumps
approximately 3000 gallons an hour for a 150 gallon reef. I opted to
add a second pump, which takes its input from the overflow box, and
outputs from the chiller directly into the tank via a bulkhead. By
this approach I actually increased the flowrate of water through the
tank. Unless you have an excess of water circulation in your tank, my
guess is that you will not be happy with stealing flowrate from the
tank to feed the chiller.




Timothy Tom August 12th 03 10:18 PM

Thinking of redoing my plumbing
 
"wobble" wrote in message ...
what pump have you got that pumps 3000 gallons per hour?


Dolphin pumps Ampmaster 3000 pumps over 3000 gallons/hr according to

the manufacturers flowchart at a 4 foot pressure head. My tank is set
up to deliver the water through a "T" fitting near the top of the tank
into opposite corners of a symmetric hex tank. Even though this seems
like alot of flow, the arrangement of the outflow does not direct the
flow onto any LR or corals, so all flow onto LR, and corals is
indirect.


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