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I would say that drop is not normal. It implies that it is sucking
air as soon as the pump is turned on. In addition to the other suggestions, possible air leaks can occur in the seal on the shaft, the gaskets in the pump housing, and the cover gasket for the prime pot. My experience with problems like this is the amount of air in the prime pot DECREASES as the pump runs and the flow of water into the pot captures the air and it is drawn into the impeller and discharged. The fact that it takes the pump some time to lose it's prime implies the flow is restricted, either on the input or the output. One approach is to slowly pour water over all possible leak points and observe if it appears to be sucked in. Another would be to cap the ends of the system and pressurize. A third would be to rig a temporary run of pipe from the suction side of the pump to the pond and see if the problem goes away. Yes, all of these are messy. PlainBill On 6 Sep 2006 08:00:35 -0700, "Bob" wrote: I am not able to watch the level of water get lower in the prime pot, so it must be a very slow process. I'm still trying to determine how long the pump will actually run before it goes dry, but I suspect that it is 6-24 hours. The pump and prime pot are above the water line, so it is sucking water up to the pump. At this point it would not be possible to position the pump below water line. After completely filling the prime pot and starting the pump, I have noticed that the water level in the prime pot immediately drops to approx. 3/4 full, which is slightly below the input of the prime pot. Is this normal? I imagine that it must be a small leak somewhere on the input side that is allowing air to enter. Any ideas as to how to identify such a small leak? --Bob-- Phyllis and Jim wrote: Could be...Loss of suction...air entry...insufficient flow rate in feed pipe. Can you watch it get lower? Is your pump a gravity-flooded prime or does it need to suck water up to the pump. If it can draw from a flooded reservoir, it is less likely to pull itself dry. To do that, the pump needs to be lower than the pond level and has to have sufficient flow to keep drawing water instead of air. Jim Bob wrote: I recently installed an external pump with a priming pot for my pond. After a few hours of running I discover that the pump is still running but there is no water flow and the priming pot is empty of water. I can stop the pump, refill the priming pot, restart it and it will pump water for a few more hours until it runs out again. I am confident that the power to the pump has not gone out temporarily. I have also verified that I can remove power from the pump and restart it just fine, since I have a swing valve on the input of the priming pot that prevents it from emptying. Any ideas as to what could be causing this? Hal wrote: On 5 Sep 2006 09:03:30 -0700, "Bob" wrote: I recently installed an external pump with a priming pot for my pond. After a few hours of running I discover that the pump is still running but there is no water flow and the priming pot is empty of water. I can stop the pump, refill the priming pot, restart it and it will pump water for a few more hours until it runs out again. I am confident that the power to the pump has not gone out temporarily. I have also verified that I can remove power from the pump and restart it just fine, since I have a swing valve on the input of the priming pot that prevents it from emptying. Any ideas as to what could be causing this? Tube/hose/fitting/cracked housing leak above the waterline. Regards, Hal |
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