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05/15/2006, 01:33 PM | #1 |
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Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 3
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Noisy standpipe
I have recently set up my first sump for my 100gal disp tank. My tank has an overflow wier of which I have in stalled a basic standpipe to drop the water to my sump in my cellar. I have tried several ideas to no prevail on silencing my standpipe. Any ideas
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05/15/2006, 01:38 PM | #2 |
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Join Date: May 2005
Location: Las Vegas
Posts: 594
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look up the durso standpipe on google or some other type of search engine
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05/15/2006, 01:41 PM | #3 |
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Join Date: May 2006
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I have tried the durso approach but the only way I can regulate the water height onm the overflow section is to drill quite a large hole in the end cap which obviously increase the noise
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05/15/2006, 02:27 PM | #4 |
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Location: Boise, ID
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Drill a small hole and put some flexible airline tubing into it reaching down far enough to the water level inside the durso. Glue it with some silicone and cut it off flush with the top of the durso. Fixed mine.
eee |
05/15/2006, 02:43 PM | #5 |
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Another question is how many GPH are you pushing with your return pump?
If it is more than 3-5x tank volume that can cause the overflow to me more noisy as well.
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"God is dead." - Nietzsche "Nietzsche is dead." - God Click my red house for my 125 gal. tank build thread. Member of Northern Arizona Marine Aquarium Society (NAMAS) Current Tank Info: 125g AGA MegaFlow - 150lbs Fiji live rock - 50g DIY sump/fuge - Tunze 9010/9015 Skimmer - Eheim 1260 - 2x Seio 1500 - 5x 80w IceCap T5 Retro - PhosBan Reactor 150 - AC Jr. Controller - Typhoon III RO/DI - Mixed Reef |
05/16/2006, 12:12 PM | #6 |
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My turn around is aprox 3x display volume. I have tried inserting flexible ailine into a hole in the cap and this is the most stable so far. The water level in the overflow stays constant for about 20-30mins and then drops which is what is causing the gurgle. It then fills back to normal level (level with the top of the tee branch and the 90) a lot slower.
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05/16/2006, 12:58 PM | #7 |
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Kansas
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Sounds like your standpipe is siphoning. You need a larger air hole IME.
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My ship came in. Unfortunately it hit a reef. Current Tank Info: 110 gallon reef display tank, fish, LPS, SPS and mushrooms. A 75 gallon sump in basement with protein skimmer, 40watt UV sterilizer, RO/DI, refugium with chaeto, phosban reactor. 40 gallon frag tank. |
05/16/2006, 01:05 PM | #8 |
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Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Chester, VA
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To cure my "water falling noise" I went very basic. Instead of having the water fall into a pipe and crashing into the water that is standing in it, I got rid of the pipes and connected a 3' flexible pool hose to my bulkhead. The flexible hose gently bends from vertical to horizontal. As it gently bends, the water gathers and gently slows down. No crashing, no gurgling, no noise.
My overflow is just a plain piece of pvc, open at the top, with a sponge on top of it to keep snails and junk out of my sump. Be aware that the brand new hose gave me a lot of bubbles for a few days until the walls coated over. Now, there are none. I also found that by making very slight changes in the bend angles, "angle of attack", and how it twisted and turned I could take it from relatively quite, to almost silent. Just another option. . .
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Rick Current Tank Info: Reefer Emeritus |
05/16/2006, 02:56 PM | #9 |
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Location: Westchester County, NY
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I found that the size of the hole on the top of the standpipe is critical in silencing them. I wound up using caps with 3/32nds of an inch on mine which completely silenced them. The slightest larger or smaller hole didn't work. I'd think that you may be successful, using a succession of drill bits on a cap and try from smallest then larger until one works for your setup.
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I'd keep the whole ocean if my den were big enough Current Tank Info: 120 gallon reef with 210 lbs. of live rock, Aqua-C EV180 Skimmer, Aquactinic double 250W MH with blue plus t5 support; 58 gallon freshwater planted tank using CO2 and T5s; 30-gallon cube with a few fancy goldfish; and a 110 gallon FOWLR |
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