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Large siphon question
I am trying to use a 4" flexible corrugated plastic pipe to siphon from
my pond into a small pool and then to a stream bed. I have no problem getting the flow going, but after a few days the flow rate goes down. Then after about a week it stops altogether. I did not need to use quite the capacity of the whole 4" line (but wanted the high water pressure it provided to form a fountain on the downside) so I added a cap in the pond at the top/supply side with many 3/8" holes. I was thinking that originally having the whole end open was causing enough of a whirlpool effect that air was slowly building up in the line and causing the siphon to eventually be lost, but the change has not seemed to have any effect, besides reducing the flow rate. ANY ideas? It is not a big deal to restart the siphon now, but I want the pipe to be buried/hidden in rocks and gravel and then it will be MUCH harder to re-establish the siphon. Thanks, Bruce |
Large siphon question
"Bruce" wrote in message oups.com... I am trying to use a 4" flexible corrugated plastic pipe to siphon from my pond into a small pool and then to a stream bed. I have no problem getting the flow going, but after a few days the flow rate goes down. Then after about a week it stops altogether. Siphons are incredibly difficult to maintain. If the fill rate into the suction side does no keep pace with the suction from the siphon, then the water level will slowly drop and the siphon will suck in air. Or if debris temporarily clogs the siphon entrance, the vacuum could suck an air bubble in from the discharge side and break the siphon as well. You may have to reengineer a solution that does not rely on a siphon. Pump fill and gravity return is the most reliable. (Again provided a leaf or something doesn't clog the return line) -S |
Large siphon question
I am trying to use a 4" flexible corrugated plastic pipe to siphon from
my pond into a small pool and then to a stream bed. I have no problem getting the flow going, but after a few days the flow rate goes down. Then after about a week it stops altogether. I did not need to use quite the capacity of the whole 4" line (but wanted the high water pressure it provided to form a fountain on the downside) so I added a cap in the pond at the top/supply side with many 3/8" holes. I was thinking that originally having the whole end open was causing enough of a whirlpool effect that air was slowly building up in the line and causing the siphon to eventually be lost, but the change has not seemed to have any effect, besides reducing the flow rate. ANY ideas? It is not a big deal to restart the siphon now, but I want the pipe to be buried/hidden in rocks and gravel and then it will be MUCH harder to re-establish the siphon. Bruce Hi Bruce. I think it may be due to the pipe being corrugated. Go with smooth pipe, see my website www.jjspond.us click on *My Filter* and scrolled down to the pictures below the filter diagram. This is how I restart my siphon when needed. The line under ground is 3". ~ jan -------------- See my ponds and filter design: www.jjspond.us ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
Large siphon question
"Hal" wrote in message
... Water does separate into H2O when boiled What is water before it's boiled? |
Large siphon question
On Wed, 19 Apr 2006 21:45:02 GMT, "Snooze" wrote:
"Hal" wrote in message .. . Water does separate into H2O when boiled What is water before it's boiled? Is this a trick question? -- Mister Gardener |
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