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The most important information is how much flow you want through your sump. Have you decided that yet? Once you get that piece of information, sizing a pump becomes easy.And it will be strait from sump to tank with two outlets and it is 5ft high
I'm a big fan of Sicce. They are one of the few motors you can get at a reasonable price that aren't made in China.1000GPH
Yup, its all a matter of personal preference. I don't like the idea of DC pump for my return. I don't run any reactors off my return so I find the reliability of an AC pump to be more important than the controllability of a DC pump.Every one has suggestions, on top I like a DC pump and get a little bigger than you need. Then if need be one can dial the pump back. I like the waveland pumps or the ecotech DC pumps
And it will be strait from sump to tank with two outlets and it is 5ft high
A split return doesn't double the head. I normally model it as an extra 90deg bend moving to 50% larger pipe. Very conservative that way.For flow you'd like somwhere around 2x and 4x your display size.
This means anything between 300 GPH and 600 GPH will be fine.
At 5' height and two outlets, I'm assuming about 15' of plumbing to do the job, including six 90º elbows, and one Tee fitting. (One foot up from the pump. Two feet to the back of the tank. Tee. Three feet to either side (+6ft). Three feet to the top of the tank on each side (+6'). Add nothing for the entrance to the tank assuming these calc's are conservative. Add another foot or two if you plan anything elaborate here. 1+2+6+6=15
1" plumbing will add another 2' of head pressure from friction loss for a total of 5' + 2' = 7'.
(@Brew12 is this right even on a split return? Meaning it's just vertical + friction loss (which accounts for the total length)? Or does the second return leg add additional head so it's really something more like 8' + 2' = 9'?)
Pressure Loss (psi): 0.88 Head Loss (ft): 2
Line Number:
Date: 1/27/2017
Nominal Pipe Size: 1
Pipe Schedule: SCH 40
Flow Rate (gpm): 10
Viscosity (cP): 1
Specific Gravity (water=1): 1.025
Temperature (F): 79
Pipe Roughness (ft): 0.000016
Actual Pipe ID (in.): 1.049
Fluid Velocity (ft/sec): 3.71
Reynolds Number: 30902
Flow Region: Turbulent
Friction Factor: 0.024
Overall K: 9.31
If you upgrade to 1.5" plumbing, friction losses become insignificant. You might be able to downgrade the pump selections below by upgrading the plumbing.
Pressure Loss (psi): 0.13 Head Loss (ft): 0.3
Line Number:
Date: 1/27/2017
Nominal Pipe Size: 1.5
Pipe Schedule: SCH 40
Flow Rate (gpm): 10
Viscosity (cP): 1
Specific Gravity (water=1): 1.025
Temperature (F): 79
Pipe Roughness (ft): 0.000016
Actual Pipe ID (in.): 1.61
Fluid Velocity (ft/sec): 1.58
Reynolds Number: 20134
Flow Region: Turbulent
Friction Factor: 0.026
Overall K: 7.86
Piping Length (ft): 15
Short Radius Elbows: 6
Tee Flow Through: 1
Pipe Exit : 2
Calculations from http://www.freecalc.com/fric.htm
- So from the Sicce line, I think the Syncra 4 appears to be the best fit. About $175.
- From Danner/Supreme, it looks like a Mag 9.5 would do it. About $115.
- At about $100, the Quiet One 5000 is a decent option (and a Sicce design taken to China) and the cheapest one too. Plenty of flow.

