Hello,
Of course it will be a little time before I can have it up
And running. I’d prefer not to do it well umm twice. But looking how my living room wall that separates it from the garage, looks like one could put a pipe that attaches on both ends. At least then it’s not a permant thing if I decide to move. I was thinking if they have valves on either side I would have more control and the ability to remove them if they get clogged. Granted a solid pipe from point a to point b is always the best, but it’s close to 25 feet to 35 feet from where the sump could sit in the garage, and link into both tanks. Now I have to do the math and see how much force I’ll need to push water that far and calculate out the head pressure at the return lines. I may have to re think using the current dc return pumps and go for something substantial larger, even though I had planned on using four of them. Two would be dedicated to each tank which they are 3100 gph, so a total of 6200 per tank on just return lines. I’m Using four 2100 gph on my 240 which is 8,400 gph plus 6200 which is 14,600 gph by 240 plus 40 which is 280 water volume minus 60 roughly for displacement so 220 total gallons to think high. Which that comes to 66 times the flow in a mixed tank in my 240.
Now for my 425 I plan on using a total of 6 of the 2100 which is going to be 12,600 plus the 6200 comes to 18,800 plus if I use the new gyro which is 3000 gph comes to 21,800 gallons per hour by 425 plus 100 sump so 525 minus displacement of est 75-80 shooting high so 445 water volume should give me a flow of 48.98 or est to 49 flow rate which if I’m runnnng mixed should be a min of 50. So either larger return pumps or add a secondary gyro to the back side and boost it to 24,800 by 445 comes to 55 times the size flow rate. Still seems awfully low for that size of tank. It was mentioned to me to run a booster in the middle of the line. So as to once the pipes reach mid point, they would enter into a new pump and continue but would increase pressure and possibly flow. (Still chewing on that one though, having something break lol in the middle of my living room would kinda be bad. I will run the pipes, or thought of running them through the main garage wall, through insulated pipes outside of the house. Then route back inside to a junction that would split for both tank. But that also seems like a huge hassle and disaster just waiting to happen. Since Having a basement here in Idaho seems to be unheard of, it’s the garage, or under the tank, which I’m trying to make them super quiet as in you don’t know they are there. My loudest item sadly is just the water flowing through the pipes and into the sump. Hmmmm