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#1
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Does any one have a way to keep their water feature full with out doing it
by hand? I was thinking there must be something out there that can be tied into a water supply that would open and shut off when a the water level reaches a set level. I would like to put something like that on my front yard water feature that is just a whisky barrel that pumps water up through a hand pump. But need to fill often here in Colorado unless I can find and install a device like I am asking for help on. You can see the set up at http://www.ofoto.com/I.jsp?c=65zgxlu...&x=0&y=-n2twfr Thank you for you help I know there must be some way to do this. -- Greg &/or Kellie Meyer |
#2
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![]() "G & K Meyer" wrote in message ... Does any one have a way to keep their water feature full with out doing it by hand? I was thinking there must be something out there that can be tied into a water supply that would open and shut off when a the water level reaches a set level. I would like to put something like that on my front yard water feature that is just a whisky barrel that pumps water up through a hand pump. But need to fill often here in Colorado unless I can find and install a device like I am asking for help on. You can see the set up at http://www.ofoto.com/I.jsp?c=65zgxlu...&x=0&y=-n2twfr Thank you for you help I know there must be some way to do this. See http://www.pvl.co.uk/balem1_anim.htm for a simple ball valve -- Steve Milk floats, stainless steel sinks |
#3
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You can see the set up at
http://www.ofoto.com/I.jsp?c=65zgxlu...&x=0&y=-n2twfr Thank you for you help I know there must be some way to do this. Very cute and pretty. You took a small space and really made it into something. ~ jan ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ |
#4
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On Sun, 16 Jan 2005 10:40:47 -0700, G & K Meyer wrote:
Does any one have a way to keep their water feature full with out doing it by hand? I was thinking there must be something out there that can be tied into a water supply that would open and shut off when a the water level reaches a set level. Toilet float valve, stock tank float valve, etc. Or a timer that runs a certain amount of time every day, with an overflow to dispose of excess. sdb -- Wanted: Omnibook 800 & accessories, cheap, working or not sdbuse1 on mailhost bigfoot.com |
#5
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Toilet float valve, stock tank float valve, etc.
Or a timer that runs a certain amount of time every day, with an overflow to dispose of excess. if you have an overflow, you might use a drip irrigation emitter |
#6
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Look into pool supply places. They sell a "toilet fill" technology type of
device that has a constant water supply to it. Pond gets low, the slide valve drops and opens allowing water in. Water level goes up and the slide does as well, closing the valve. They are not too terribly expensive. "G & K Meyer" wrote in message ... Does any one have a way to keep their water feature full with out doing it by hand? I was thinking there must be something out there that can be tied into a water supply that would open and shut off when a the water level reaches a set level. I would like to put something like that on my front yard water feature that is just a whisky barrel that pumps water up through a hand pump. But need to fill often here in Colorado unless I can find and install a device like I am asking for help on. You can see the set up at http://www.ofoto.com/I.jsp?c=65zgxlu...&x=0&y=-n2twfr Thank you for you help I know there must be some way to do this. -- Greg &/or Kellie Meyer |
#7
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I use a stock tank filler from the local Farm Supply place. $12. I have it
tied directly into the sprinkler system mainline, so I needed a pressure reducer valve. For those of you using this setup on a large scale pond, be sure to put a whole house filter in line to get rid of the chlorine before it goes in your pond. Jim "Wildkarrde" wrote in message ... Look into pool supply places. They sell a "toilet fill" technology type of device that has a constant water supply to it. Pond gets low, the slide valve drops and opens allowing water in. Water level goes up and the slide does as well, closing the valve. They are not too terribly expensive. "G & K Meyer" wrote in message ... Does any one have a way to keep their water feature full with out doing it by hand? I was thinking there must be something out there that can be tied into a water supply that would open and shut off when a the water level reaches a set level. I would like to put something like that on my front yard water feature that is just a whisky barrel that pumps water up through a hand pump. But need to fill often here in Colorado unless I can find and install a device like I am asking for help on. You can see the set up at http://www.ofoto.com/I.jsp?c=65zgxlu...&x=0&y=-n2twfr Thank you for you help I know there must be some way to do this. -- Greg &/or Kellie Meyer |
#8
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Go right ahead and play russian roulette and chalk it up to your
laziness in maintaining your pond and rely on a filter which may or may not be doing its job! Welcome you fit right into this group just fine.......Did Jan turn you on to this gadget or did you discover it all on your own? Probably the local farm supply clerk with that extensive background in ponding and fish biology. On Mon, 21 Feb 2005 12:04:54 -0600, "laskdfpoiwq" wrote: ===I use a stock tank filler from the local Farm Supply place. $12. I have it ===tied directly into the sprinkler system mainline, so I needed a pressure ===reducer valve. === ===For those of you using this setup on a large scale pond, be sure to put a ===whole house filter in line to get rid of the chlorine before it goes in your ===pond. === ===Jim === ==="Wildkarrde" wrote in message ... === Look into pool supply places. They sell a "toilet fill" technology type === of === device that has a constant water supply to it. Pond gets low, the slide === valve drops and opens allowing water in. Water level goes up and the === slide === does as well, closing the valve. They are not too terribly expensive. === "G & K Meyer" wrote in message === ... === Does any one have a way to keep their water feature full with out doing === it === by hand? I was thinking there must be something out there that can be === tied === into a water supply that would open and shut off when a the water level === reaches a set level. === I would like to put something like that on my front yard water feature === that === is just a whisky barrel that pumps water up through a hand pump. But === need === to fill often here in Colorado unless I can find and install a device === like === I === am asking for help on. === You can see the set up at === http://www.ofoto.com/I.jsp?c=65zgxlu...&x=0&y=-n2twfr === Thank you for you help I know there must be some way to do this. === -- === Greg &/or Kellie Meyer === === === === === === === === === |
#9
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On Mon, 21 Feb 2005 (HendleyWM) Roy wrote:
.......Did Jan turn you on to this gadget or did you discover it all on your own? No Roy, not this jan anyway, I usually recommend hose timers over auto fills, but the carbon filter on the hose end works great to my understanding, as long as folks make sure they are doing the job. I think someone once posted that once they get full of chlorine they start dumping it????? Maybe some else can remind me? ~ jan ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ |
#10
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Jan remembers correctly. I don't know the mechanism for the release of the
chlorine from the filter, but my BIL killed several fish and saved a few by moving them from the main pond to a separate pond. When I got there and measured the chlorine level of his hose water, it was in the level that is safe for swimming pools and hot tubs. Before the filter, it was at a level that would have been too low for those applications but unsafe for fish. We added a dechlorinator and all fish that were not already dead survived. He had been using the system for several years with once or twice a year cartridge replacement. -- RichToyBox http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html "~ jan JJsPond.us" wrote in message ... On Mon, 21 Feb 2005 (HendleyWM) Roy wrote: .......Did Jan turn you on to this gadget or did you discover it all on your own? No Roy, not this jan anyway, I usually recommend hose timers over auto fills, but the carbon filter on the hose end works great to my understanding, as long as folks make sure they are doing the job. I think someone once posted that once they get full of chlorine they start dumping it????? Maybe some else can remind me? ~ jan ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ |
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