ddaddy
Member
Ok, I'm relatively dumb when it comes to aquarium plumbing so bare with me. People who are building sumps are always talking about overflows so what exactly is an overflow and what does it do?
I don't know much about sumps and I would like to so I'll ask a couple questions there too. When taking water into your sump you use gravity, right?. You just have a constant cycle of siphoned water entering the sump and water being returned up to the tank by a pump that is regulated by a ball valve? That is my general understanding anyway. So my question is how do you get the exact amount of water output as water input? Wouldn't there be a margin of error even w/ a ball valve that would eventually overflow the sump or tank? If so is that where the "overflow" comes in.
I've currently only been using hang on filters and I would like to know how the more advanced aquarium plumbing works.
thanks,
dave
I don't know much about sumps and I would like to so I'll ask a couple questions there too. When taking water into your sump you use gravity, right?. You just have a constant cycle of siphoned water entering the sump and water being returned up to the tank by a pump that is regulated by a ball valve? That is my general understanding anyway. So my question is how do you get the exact amount of water output as water input? Wouldn't there be a margin of error even w/ a ball valve that would eventually overflow the sump or tank? If so is that where the "overflow" comes in.
I've currently only been using hang on filters and I would like to know how the more advanced aquarium plumbing works.
thanks,
dave