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How to trace leak
Help,
Last year I moved into a house which has a koi pond. I had no problems with the pond last year. This year I am getting a slow leak. I can't seem to find out where the water is going. I have checked around the pond and I can't find a wet area which would indicate that the water is spilling over to that area. I have a pond which has a sump at one end. The water flows into the sump and then a pump pumps it up to another sump which when it overflows allows the water to move down a waterfall. I have filled up both sumps and checked to make sure the water is not leaking from any of the connections on the pump. If I fill the pond and lower sump but I do not turn the pump on the water level remains constant. It is only when the pump is turned on that the water level drops, about 1" per hour. As I have said I checked the ground between the two sumps and it is dry when the pump is working. I have checked the ground on either side of the waterfall and it is dry. The only thing I can think of doing is buying a seperate hose to hook up to the pump bypassing the upper sump. I was going to move it slowly up the waterfall to see at what point the water in the pond starts to drop. Just below that point I guess I have a leak. Are there any other suggestions? Thanks Alex |
How to trace leak
wrote in message oups.com... As I have said I checked the ground between the two sumps and it is dry when the pump is working. I have checked the ground on either side of the waterfall and it is dry. ============================ *Note: There are TWO "Koi-Lo's" on this NG* Is it possible there's a leak in the sump itself? We just had to buy an new $100 liner today for one of my 680g tanks because there's a leak we can't find either. In my case I believe something small and sharp pierced the tarp, thin plastic tank bottom and inner plastic (shipping) liner. It's losing 1 1/2" to 2" a day. And we're right in the middle of repairing the berm on the 800g inground pond out front...... *sigh* ..... it rained us out today. Please let me know if you do find the leak and where it was. Good luck. -- Koi-Lo.... Frugal ponding since 1995. Aquariums since 1952. My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
How to trace leak
On 30 Apr 2006 18:00:24 -0700, wrote:
Last year I moved into a house which has a koi pond. I had no problems with the pond last year. This year I am getting a slow leak. I can't seem to find out where the water is going. I have checked around the pond and I can't find a wet area which would indicate that the water is spilling over to that area. I have a pond which has a sump at one end. The water flows into the sump and then a pump pumps it up to another sump which when it overflows allows the water to move down a waterfall. I have filled up both sumps and checked to make sure the water is not leaking from any of the connections on the pump. If I fill the pond and lower sump but I do not turn the pump on the water level remains constant. It is only when the pump is turned on that the water level drops, about 1" per hour. As I have said I checked the ground between the two sumps and it is dry when the pump is working. I have checked the ground on either side of the waterfall and it is dry. The only thing I can think of doing is buying a seperate hose to hook up to the pump bypassing the upper sump. I was going to move it slowly up the waterfall to see at what point the water in the pond starts to drop. Just below that point I guess I have a leak. Alex Sounds like you've got a good plan. In the waterfall, if loose rock, look for areas of wicking by any plants or dirt moved under rocks. That is my biggest problem, moisture loving bugs/worms, that move dirt closer & closer till it meets water and then wicking sucks water out. ~ jan -------------- See my ponds and filter design: www.jjspond.us ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
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