Originally Posted by JasenHicks
You most certainly too can have two pumps inline with eachother! One has to be a smaller pump with lower pressure first, and a higher output one second. That is how you move water a long distance! This is where a good engineering background comes into play. You can, if needed have 2 pumps inline. The first pump provides the necessary Net Positive Suction head for the second pump, Net Positive Suction Head (NPSH) is the amount of water a pump needs to not cavitate, i.e. BREAK. We use the two pump concept in Navy Nuclear power plants all the time, and it works.
Yeah...BUT...
Your not dealing with "open" chambers, gravity and siphon effect...
In an "open chamber" design (as pictured) volume in the various chambers can and will change if the two pumps are not "perfectly" in sync....Can't be done with the type of equipment available for the general hobbiest...
Now..if the chambers were "closed" or sealed (ala canister filter or fluidized bed reactors) you could run two or three or any number of pumps "in ilne" to maintain flow...
But that's a totallly different "enginering" concept...