Water change with a sump???

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jgvergo

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Newbie question: I am building a 30 gallon sump with the "typical" three chambers. I will set up the baffles so that the first two chambers are at a constant level and the return pump chamber is variable based on the total volume of water in the system.

If I siphon water out of my display tank, is there a way to replace it by pumping water into my sump? My DT will be 85 gallons and I'd like to be able to do up to 33% water changes.

If I pump the new water into the return pump chamber of the sump, I'm worried about pumping it too fast or too slow. Too fast, and I could overflow the sump. Too slow, and the return pump will get lots of air in it.
 
I just turn my return pumps and skimmer off and siphon what I want. I then put some of the water back in my display and the rest in my sump as I have the return pumps back on. I like to have the power heads on while adding water to help it mix with the remaining in the display. I don't put new water in on corals (usually I put it in over the power heads) and I have never had a problem doing this but I make sure temp and salinity match.
 
you could automate things and put a small pump with drip line at 1 gph of newly mixed water into the tank and another of the same setup in the last chamber of the sump pumping and dripping into a drain at 1gph.

You'd get 24 gallons a day changed without turning anything off or doing anything as far as carrying buckets. Makes life really easy.
 
you could automate things and put a small pump with drip line at 1 gph of newly mixed water into the tank and another of the same setup in the last chamber of the sump pumping and dripping into a drain at 1gph.

You'd get 24 gallons a day changed without turning anything off or doing anything as far as carrying buckets. Makes life really easy.
I love the idea, but how do you ensure that the two drip lines are operating at the same rate? Being off by 1-2 gallons a day could have serious consequences.
 
You hook up 3/8" airline from the pump with an airline regulator valve in the end and calibrate them to match. This way you have precision control over the drip rate.
 
Good video as a how to. Just hook it up to a pump instead of a main water source.....

 
Seems like dosing pumps would work better for this since they are calibrated and run measured doses. More accurate that way imo. Never done it personally but have read a few build threads where they use them for that and claim no problems.
 
Could definitely be viable but also may be a bit more expensive. Either way you aren't carrying buckets anymore
 

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