dive girl
Member
I have no idea why I just don't get it!
I've searched on here and on search engines and looked many diy projects but I can't understand the final chamber of the sump.
I've built my own sump/refugium using a 20 gallon glass tank. It runs under my 29 gallon DT. I use an overflow box.
I have plumbed it with a ball joint on the overflow (so if I need to stop it for some reason, I can without breaking the suction), a ball joint on the return along with a one-way valve, and a return line going back into the sump so that if I need to slow down the flow I can without putting a strain on my pump (Rio 1400).
Here's what I'm just not getting:
It seems like I am constantly having to make small adjustments (at least once a day!) to one of the ball joints to keep the flow at the same rate of return as I have coming in from the overflow. Does everyone have to do this? If not why? It is a huge pain to have to do this so often! I'm doing something wrong, but I'm not sure what.
Why is evaporation only seen in the last chamber of a sump?
I've searched on here and on search engines and looked many diy projects but I can't understand the final chamber of the sump.
I've built my own sump/refugium using a 20 gallon glass tank. It runs under my 29 gallon DT. I use an overflow box.
I have plumbed it with a ball joint on the overflow (so if I need to stop it for some reason, I can without breaking the suction), a ball joint on the return along with a one-way valve, and a return line going back into the sump so that if I need to slow down the flow I can without putting a strain on my pump (Rio 1400).
Here's what I'm just not getting:
It seems like I am constantly having to make small adjustments (at least once a day!) to one of the ball joints to keep the flow at the same rate of return as I have coming in from the overflow. Does everyone have to do this? If not why? It is a huge pain to have to do this so often! I'm doing something wrong, but I'm not sure what.
Why is evaporation only seen in the last chamber of a sump?