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New Pump



 
 
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  #1  
Old July 26th 03, 02:40 PM
graham
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Default New Pump

I am having to replace my nursery pro pump, I need something that will
deliver around 600gph to the top of a 6 ft water fall with 1in tubing. I am
looking at the OASE Nautilus 30 as a replacement, am I on the right track or
not


  #2  
Old July 26th 03, 08:32 PM
Simon Avery
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Default New Pump

"graham" wrote:

Hello graham

g I am having to replace my nursery pro pump, I need something
g that will deliver around 600gph to the top of a 6 ft water
g fall with 1in tubing. I am looking at the OASE Nautilus 30
g as a replacement, am I on the right track or not

Dunno where you're from, but if the UK then Screwfix are doing a
submersible clean water pump for under 50ukp. Been running mine fine
for a year now.

--
Simon Avery, Dartmoor, UK Ý http://www.digdilem.org/

  #3  
Old July 27th 03, 03:21 PM
Rodney Pont
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Default New Pump

On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 13:40:24 GMT, graham wrote:

I am having to replace my nursery pro pump, I need something that will
deliver around 600gph to the top of a 6 ft water fall with 1in tubing. I am
looking at the OASE Nautilus 30 as a replacement, am I on the right track or
not



Below is a rough guide on rating a pump.

You can calculate the effect of the pipe on the flow using the chart at
http://www.plumbingsupply.com/flowchart.html. At 600gph down 100ft of
pipe you would loose 6.02psi. For 30ft this is about 2psi, multiply
this by 2.3 to get the height, this gives us 4.6ft, add this to the
height of the waterfall and we get 10.6 feet.

Note the tables are for smooth plastic pipe and if you are using pipe
that isn't smooth inside it will slow the flow dramatically.

So assuming you have 30 foot of 1 inch pipe you need a pump that can
deliver 600 gallons per hour at a head of 10.6ft.

I don't know the Nautilus 30 (I'm in the UK) but the Nautilus 3000
would only be pumping 56gph at this height, 385gph at 6 foot so if
these are the same pump then no, it won't manage. Look at something
like the Otter Maximus 5000, Tetra GPX7000, Blagdon P8000 or Laguna
Power Jet 7000. The Tetra one is 235 watts so not very efficient
compared to the Otter at 95 watts. The pumps are just ones I have got
on my shortlist for the waterfall here, no doubt there are others. The
NMautilus 6000 would do as would the Aquarius 5000E.

Hope this is useful, it's only a guide though and in the end it's your
choice.

--
Regards - Rodney Pont
The from address exists but is mostly dumped,
please send any emails to the address below
e-mail ngps07 (at) infohit (dot) fsnet (dot) co (dot) uk


  #4  
Old July 27th 03, 08:34 PM
Simon Avery
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Default New Pump

"Rodney Pont" wrote:

Hello Rodney

RP Below is a rough guide on rating a pump.

snip

Useful stuff.

RP I don't know the Nautilus 30 (I'm in the UK) but the
RP Nautilus 3000 would only be pumping 56gph at this height,
RP 385gph at 6 foot so if these are the same pump then no, it
RP won't manage. Look at something like the Otter Maximus 5000,

Price for the higher power pumps seem to rise dramatically though.
I've used twin smaller pumps (200watt general purpose submersibles,
not something badged as "pond" because that seems to put the price up
for no particular reason) to gain an equivalent output for less than a
single big pump. Gives an advantage in that if one does break and the
pump is producing oxygen, you don't have to panic to get another in
before all the fish die.

Just a thought.

--
Simon Avery, Dartmoor, UK Ý http://www.digdilem.org/

  #5  
Old July 28th 03, 09:39 AM
Rodney Pont
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Default New Pump

On Sun, 27 Jul 2003 19:34:15 GMT, Simon Avery wrote:

Price for the higher power pumps seem to rise dramatically though.
I've used twin smaller pumps (200watt general purpose submersibles,
not something badged as "pond" because that seems to put the price up
for no particular reason) to gain an equivalent output for less than a =


single big pump. Gives an advantage in that if one does break and the
pump is producing oxygen, you don't have to panic to get another in
before all the fish die.


A couple of years ago I would have agreed with you Simon but with the
new ranges things have changed. For example the Maximus 9000 can shift
9080lph, has a maximum head of 5.5m and only uses 150watts so can be
run for about =9C75 per year. It can be got for about =9C110 from variou=
s
places on the web. Even last year I couldn't find anything this
efficient and the new this year Otter Olympus range looks good too.

I had a look at screwfix and their pumps are from 200 to 300 watts and
shift 7500lph. Yes they are cheaper to buy but even the 200 watt one
costs an extra =9C25 per year to run and over the life of the pump it ca=
n
more than cover the difference.

I agree with your point about two pumps, we have one for the waterfall
and one for the filter so if one fails there is water flow while it's
replaced.

--
Regards - Rodney Pont
The from address exists but is mostly dumped,
please send any emails to the address below
e-mail ngps07 (at) infohit (dot) fsnet (dot) co (dot) uk


  #6  
Old July 28th 03, 04:59 PM
Simon Avery
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Default New Pump

"Rodney Pont" wrote:

Hello Rodney

Price for the higher power pumps seem to rise dramatically
though. I've used twin smaller pumps (200watt general
purpose submersibles, not something badged as "pond"
because that seems to put the price up for no particular


RP A couple of years ago I would have agreed with you Simon but
RP with the new ranges things have changed. For example the
RP Maximus 9000 can shift 9080lph, has a maximum head of 5.5m
RP and only uses 150watts so can be run for about œ75 per year.
RP It can be got for about œ110 from various places on the web.

Wow, that's damned impressive - looks like things have definately
changed recently.

RP I had a look at screwfix and their pumps are from 200 to 300
RP watts and shift 7500lph. Yes they are cheaper to buy but
RP even the 200 watt one costs an extra œ25 per year to run and
RP over the life of the pump it can more than cover the
RP difference.

F'sure, I have their 200watt pump which is lovely. Maybe my maths is a
bit rusty, but I budgeted 50-60ukp/year running 24/7. Hard to notice
in the general noise though.

RP I agree with your point about two pumps, we have one for the
RP waterfall and one for the filter so if one fails there is
RP water flow while it's replaced.

One thing you tend to learn the hard way is to keep the electrical
connection close to the pump, at least if you've buried the supply,
and to use decent re-usable connectors. Quick job to replace a broken
pump then, instead of having to rip up half a patio...

--
Simon Avery, Dartmoor, UK Ý http://www.digdilem.org/

  #7  
Old February 2nd 11, 06:51 PM
micgalnixon micgalnixon is offline
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First recorded activity by FishkeepingBanter: Feb 2011
Posts: 6
Default

I agree with your point about the two pumps, we have a waterfall and a filter, if you do not have the water flow, while its replaced.
  #8  
Old July 30th 03, 09:53 PM
Amanda Pope
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Default New Pump

As someone who sells a lot of these things online. I can advise you of a
couple of things from a trade perspective

The fewer moving parts the better.We get very few returns from the Blagdon
Amphibious range. ( magnetic movement)

A lot of the new pumps are styled to appeal to the 40 something man. Boys
toys. many are overpriced for the performance. (If it looks like a car or a
trainer then this is a big clue) Beware of gimmick its nearly all marketing.

Linked pump filter systems are to make you buy both from the same
manufacturer. Not necessary at all.

You do get what you pay for. The cheap pumps with exception of the Trident
Otter range are just that.

Do not ever buy the really cheap Italian ones doing the round in the garden
centres they are a complete waste of money.

Check the cost of spare parts. Ceramic shafts and impellers are often as
expensive as the pump.

Never buy an pump that will be struggling to do the job you want. Always buy
a bigger pump there will be less wear and tear on a pump working under
capacity than flat out.


With that in mind chose solid handling or clear water to suit your filter
system.

Hope this helps.


www.arghamvillage.co.uk








graham wrote in message
. ..
I am having to replace my nursery pro pump, I need something that will
deliver around 600gph to the top of a 6 ft water fall with 1in tubing. I

am
looking at the OASE Nautilus 30 as a replacement, am I on the right track

or
not




 




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