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#1
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Instead of putting a bottom drain, I attached a 2" hose from the
skimmer to the deepest part of the pond. The end of the hose has a strainer. Should I point the strainer up or down. Can I put rocks in the pond with the strainer. Would rocks help the pond cleaner or make more trouble for myself. Any advice is appreciated. ______ -------- | \ / | ---- \ / | | \ / / \ | | / \ | |______ / \ | -------- ---------- |
#2
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"DAN" wrote in message
om... Instead of putting a bottom drain, I attached a 2" hose from the skimmer to the deepest part of the pond. Move it off the bottom so you don't accidentally drain the whole pond if something screws up. You can always drop it when you want to. The end of the hose has a strainer. Should I point the strainer up or down. Mine points sideways so the suction helps rotate the water in the pond, avoiding stagnant spots. Can I put rocks in the pond with the strainer. Would rocks help the pond cleaner or make more trouble for myself. There are people who will either swear by rocks or swear at rocks. I won't comment one way or another so no one will swear at me. Any advice is appreciated. ______ -------- | \ / | ---- \ / | | \ / / \ | | / \ | |______ / \ | -------- ---------- |
#3
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![]() "grubber" wrote in message ... snip There are people who will either swear by rocks or swear at rocks. I won't comment one way or another so no one will swear at me. snip OK, I'll do it for you...Last year I used piles of pea gravel to level specific areas of my VF so that pots would site nicely. They have made nothing but a mess in the pond, and they make for a pain in the arse when trying to clean the mulm up. Oh, and my pots don't sit straight anymore, but the plants don't care, so it was a needless task. I swear at rocks...small ones. As far as larger ones, I do have some of those, because I like the look. -- BV. www.iheartmypond.com |
#4
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![]() "grubber" wrote in message ... snip There are people who will either swear by rocks or swear at rocks. I won't comment one way or another so no one will swear at me. snip OK, I'll do it for you...Last year I used piles of pea gravel to level specific areas of my VF so that pots would site nicely. They have made nothing but a mess in the pond, and they make for a pain in the arse when trying to clean the mulm up. Oh, and my pots don't sit straight anymore, but the plants don't care, so it was a needless task. I swear at rocks...small ones. As far as larger ones, I do have some of those, because I like the look. -- BV. www.iheartmypond.com |
#5
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Ii may be due to the limited "picture" abilities of a text-only site, but
"skimmer" denotes an opening that will catch surface items, such as leaves. Your drawing indicates the intention of using several sections of 2" pipe or hose to the bottom. From my (albeit limited) experience, it won't work without some fancy plumbing work. Water is lazy and takes the path of least resistance: it won't *suck* from the bottom if it can simply *slurp* off the surface. Now, if you can figure out some way to close off the surface opening, forcing the water to be sucked off the bottom, THEN it will work, kinda like the retro-fit bottom drains (which is what you will have at that point). But it will have to face down in order to clean the bottom; o'wise, it will simply be circulating water from about 6" above the bottom, leaving that 6" to gather crud. Hope this makes sense . . . Lee "DAN" wrote in message om... Instead of putting a bottom drain, I attached a 2" hose from the skimmer to the deepest part of the pond. The end of the hose has a strainer. Should I point the strainer up or down. Can I put rocks in the pond with the strainer. Would rocks help the pond cleaner or make more trouble for myself. Any advice is appreciated. ______ -------- | \ / | ---- \ / | | \ / / \ | | / \ | |______ / \ | -------- ---------- |
#6
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Newbie here. Been lurking a while and I now have a question. I'm in
the middle of building a 2500 gal. or so pond. I've been thinking of a DIY skimmer with the bottom drain connected to it at a low point. The skimmer would be a series of chambers ( with baskets to catch the big stuff. ) Actually, more of a skimmer / settling chamber. Side view would look like a box with four or five spill over baffles, the first baffle area with leaf basket ( higher than the baffle ), the third or fourth chamber plumbed 3-4" of the bottom with a bottom drain inlet, and the last chamber is where the external pump would draw from. Think this would provide enough flow for the bottom drain? Inlet would be lower than pond level as would the skimmer inlet. I was thinking a valve on the bottom drain line to to adjust the amount of draw from either source. I have a similar principal at my day job which is called a clarifier. A much larger, heavy industrial item for separating muck and oil from water. Kind of a multi chamber settling drain. Thoughts?? TIA! Project from the beginning with no descriptions ( except to say, the square thing isn't a pond. But it will hide the pumps, filters, etc. ) Don't mind the mess!! http://www.bunchobikes.com/pond.htm Lee B. wrote: Ii may be due to the limited "picture" abilities of a text-only site, but "skimmer" denotes an opening that will catch surface items, such as leaves. Your drawing indicates the intention of using several sections of 2" pipe or hose to the bottom. From my (albeit limited) experience, it won't work without some fancy plumbing work. Water is lazy and takes the path of least resistance: it won't *suck* from the bottom if it can simply *slurp* off the surface. Now, if you can figure out some way to close off the surface opening, forcing the water to be sucked off the bottom, THEN it will work, kinda like the retro-fit bottom drains (which is what you will have at that point). But it will have to face down in order to clean the bottom; o'wise, it will simply be circulating water from about 6" above the bottom, leaving that 6" to gather crud. Hope this makes sense . . . Lee "DAN" wrote in message . com... Instead of putting a bottom drain, I attached a 2" hose from the skimmer to the deepest part of the pond. The end of the hose has a strainer. Should I point the strainer up or down. Can I put rocks in the pond with the strainer. Would rocks help the pond cleaner or make more trouble for myself. Any advice is appreciated. ______ -------- | \ / | ---- \ / | | \ / / \ | | / \ | |______ / \ | -------- ---------- |
#7
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Thanks for all the advice. My skimmer and bottom drain-strain works
fine. Both pulls into the skimmer. I will try to set the strainer to the side to see it makes any difference. Mark and Kim Smith wrote in message ... Newbie here. Been lurking a while and I now have a question. I'm in the middle of building a 2500 gal. or so pond. I've been thinking of a DIY skimmer with the bottom drain connected to it at a low point. The skimmer would be a series of chambers ( with baskets to catch the big stuff. ) Actually, more of a skimmer / settling chamber. Side view would look like a box with four or five spill over baffles, the first baffle area with leaf basket ( higher than the baffle ), the third or fourth chamber plumbed 3-4" of the bottom with a bottom drain inlet, and the last chamber is where the external pump would draw from. Think this would provide enough flow for the bottom drain? Inlet would be lower than pond level as would the skimmer inlet. I was thinking a valve on the bottom drain line to to adjust the amount of draw from either source. I have a similar principal at my day job which is called a clarifier. A much larger, heavy industrial item for separating muck and oil from water. Kind of a multi chamber settling drain. Thoughts?? TIA! Project from the beginning with no descriptions ( except to say, the square thing isn't a pond. But it will hide the pumps, filters, etc. ) Don't mind the mess!! http://www.bunchobikes.com/pond.htm Lee B. wrote: Ii may be due to the limited "picture" abilities of a text-only site, but "skimmer" denotes an opening that will catch surface items, such as leaves. Your drawing indicates the intention of using several sections of 2" pipe or hose to the bottom. From my (albeit limited) experience, it won't work without some fancy plumbing work. Water is lazy and takes the path of least resistance: it won't *suck* from the bottom if it can simply *slurp* off the surface. Now, if you can figure out some way to close off the surface opening, forcing the water to be sucked off the bottom, THEN it will work, kinda like the retro-fit bottom drains (which is what you will have at that point). But it will have to face down in order to clean the bottom; o'wise, it will simply be circulating water from about 6" above the bottom, leaving that 6" to gather crud. Hope this makes sense . . . Lee "DAN" wrote in message . com... Instead of putting a bottom drain, I attached a 2" hose from the skimmer to the deepest part of the pond. The end of the hose has a strainer. Should I point the strainer up or down. Can I put rocks in the pond with the strainer. Would rocks help the pond cleaner or make more trouble for myself. Any advice is appreciated. ______ -------- | \ / | ---- \ / | | \ / / \ | | / \ | |______ / \ | -------- ---------- |
#8
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Thanks for all the advice. My skimmer and bottom drain-strain works
fine. Both pulls into the skimmer. I will try to set the strainer to the side to see it makes any difference. Mark and Kim Smith wrote in message ... Newbie here. Been lurking a while and I now have a question. I'm in the middle of building a 2500 gal. or so pond. I've been thinking of a DIY skimmer with the bottom drain connected to it at a low point. The skimmer would be a series of chambers ( with baskets to catch the big stuff. ) Actually, more of a skimmer / settling chamber. Side view would look like a box with four or five spill over baffles, the first baffle area with leaf basket ( higher than the baffle ), the third or fourth chamber plumbed 3-4" of the bottom with a bottom drain inlet, and the last chamber is where the external pump would draw from. Think this would provide enough flow for the bottom drain? Inlet would be lower than pond level as would the skimmer inlet. I was thinking a valve on the bottom drain line to to adjust the amount of draw from either source. I have a similar principal at my day job which is called a clarifier. A much larger, heavy industrial item for separating muck and oil from water. Kind of a multi chamber settling drain. Thoughts?? TIA! Project from the beginning with no descriptions ( except to say, the square thing isn't a pond. But it will hide the pumps, filters, etc. ) Don't mind the mess!! http://www.bunchobikes.com/pond.htm Lee B. wrote: Ii may be due to the limited "picture" abilities of a text-only site, but "skimmer" denotes an opening that will catch surface items, such as leaves. Your drawing indicates the intention of using several sections of 2" pipe or hose to the bottom. From my (albeit limited) experience, it won't work without some fancy plumbing work. Water is lazy and takes the path of least resistance: it won't *suck* from the bottom if it can simply *slurp* off the surface. Now, if you can figure out some way to close off the surface opening, forcing the water to be sucked off the bottom, THEN it will work, kinda like the retro-fit bottom drains (which is what you will have at that point). But it will have to face down in order to clean the bottom; o'wise, it will simply be circulating water from about 6" above the bottom, leaving that 6" to gather crud. Hope this makes sense . . . Lee "DAN" wrote in message . com... Instead of putting a bottom drain, I attached a 2" hose from the skimmer to the deepest part of the pond. The end of the hose has a strainer. Should I point the strainer up or down. Can I put rocks in the pond with the strainer. Would rocks help the pond cleaner or make more trouble for myself. Any advice is appreciated. ______ -------- | \ / | ---- \ / | | \ / / \ | | / \ | |______ / \ | -------- ---------- |
#9
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OMGosh! Thanks for all the pictures and keep at it, I love to see all the
steps in action..... oh, and glad it's not me doing them. ;o) ~ jan See my ponds and filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website On 15 Apr 2004 16:43:54 EDT, Mark and Kim Smith wrote: Newbie here. Been lurking a while and I now have a question. I'm in the middle of building a 2500 gal. or so pond. I've been thinking of a DIY skimmer with the bottom drain connected to it at a low point. The skimmer would be a series of chambers ( with baskets to catch the big stuff. ) Actually, more of a skimmer / settling chamber. Side view would look like a box with four or five spill over baffles, the first baffle area with leaf basket ( higher than the baffle ), the third or fourth chamber plumbed 3-4" of the bottom with a bottom drain inlet, and the last chamber is where the external pump would draw from. Think this would provide enough flow for the bottom drain? Inlet would be lower than pond level as would the skimmer inlet. I was thinking a valve on the bottom drain line to to adjust the amount of draw from either source. I have a similar principal at my day job which is called a clarifier. A much larger, heavy industrial item for separating muck and oil from water. Kind of a multi chamber settling drain. Thoughts?? TIA! Project from the beginning with no descriptions ( except to say, the square thing isn't a pond. But it will hide the pumps, filters, etc. ) Don't mind the mess!! http://www.bunchobikes.com/pond.htm Lee B. wrote: Ii may be due to the limited "picture" abilities of a text-only site, but "skimmer" denotes an opening that will catch surface items, such as leaves. Your drawing indicates the intention of using several sections of 2" pipe or hose to the bottom. From my (albeit limited) experience, it won't work without some fancy plumbing work. Water is lazy and takes the path of least resistance: it won't *suck* from the bottom if it can simply *slurp* off the surface. Now, if you can figure out some way to close off the surface opening, forcing the water to be sucked off the bottom, THEN it will work, kinda like the retro-fit bottom drains (which is what you will have at that point). But it will have to face down in order to clean the bottom; o'wise, it will simply be circulating water from about 6" above the bottom, leaving that 6" to gather crud. Hope this makes sense . . . Lee "DAN" wrote in message .com... Instead of putting a bottom drain, I attached a 2" hose from the skimmer to the deepest part of the pond. The end of the hose has a strainer. Should I point the strainer up or down. Can I put rocks in the pond with the strainer. Would rocks help the pond cleaner or make more trouble for myself. Any advice is appreciated. ______ -------- | \ / | ---- \ / | | \ / / \ | | / \ | |______ / \ | -------- ---------- |
#10
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OMGosh! Thanks for all the pictures and keep at it, I love to see all the
steps in action..... oh, and glad it's not me doing them. ;o) ~ jan See my ponds and filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website On 15 Apr 2004 16:43:54 EDT, Mark and Kim Smith wrote: Newbie here. Been lurking a while and I now have a question. I'm in the middle of building a 2500 gal. or so pond. I've been thinking of a DIY skimmer with the bottom drain connected to it at a low point. The skimmer would be a series of chambers ( with baskets to catch the big stuff. ) Actually, more of a skimmer / settling chamber. Side view would look like a box with four or five spill over baffles, the first baffle area with leaf basket ( higher than the baffle ), the third or fourth chamber plumbed 3-4" of the bottom with a bottom drain inlet, and the last chamber is where the external pump would draw from. Think this would provide enough flow for the bottom drain? Inlet would be lower than pond level as would the skimmer inlet. I was thinking a valve on the bottom drain line to to adjust the amount of draw from either source. I have a similar principal at my day job which is called a clarifier. A much larger, heavy industrial item for separating muck and oil from water. Kind of a multi chamber settling drain. Thoughts?? TIA! Project from the beginning with no descriptions ( except to say, the square thing isn't a pond. But it will hide the pumps, filters, etc. ) Don't mind the mess!! http://www.bunchobikes.com/pond.htm Lee B. wrote: Ii may be due to the limited "picture" abilities of a text-only site, but "skimmer" denotes an opening that will catch surface items, such as leaves. Your drawing indicates the intention of using several sections of 2" pipe or hose to the bottom. From my (albeit limited) experience, it won't work without some fancy plumbing work. Water is lazy and takes the path of least resistance: it won't *suck* from the bottom if it can simply *slurp* off the surface. Now, if you can figure out some way to close off the surface opening, forcing the water to be sucked off the bottom, THEN it will work, kinda like the retro-fit bottom drains (which is what you will have at that point). But it will have to face down in order to clean the bottom; o'wise, it will simply be circulating water from about 6" above the bottom, leaving that 6" to gather crud. Hope this makes sense . . . Lee "DAN" wrote in message .com... Instead of putting a bottom drain, I attached a 2" hose from the skimmer to the deepest part of the pond. The end of the hose has a strainer. Should I point the strainer up or down. Can I put rocks in the pond with the strainer. Would rocks help the pond cleaner or make more trouble for myself. Any advice is appreciated. ______ -------- | \ / | ---- \ / | | \ / / \ | | / \ | |______ / \ | -------- ---------- |
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