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I personally don't run any mechanical filtration so I cant help you there.Also, the felt socks I use are 100 micron. Is that an issue?
I'd like to explore this comment. From the pictures it looks like youhave a beananimal or herbie return system. Are you saying that your full siphon DOES NOT have a gate valve?Also, I know I don't have a gate valve, but not sure if that's the problem.
I'd like to explore this comment. From the pictures it looks like youhave a beananimal or herbie return system. Are you saying that your full siphon DOES NOT have a gate valve?
The constant fluctuation you described in the first post suggest that the section your return pump sits is in constant flux, which can be caused by an unregulated flow through the sump. If you don't have a means to regulate flow at a constant your sump will experience that fluctuation. And that will cause your ATO to act as you described.
In this photo, does the water level stay constant or does it fluctuate as well?
I can try that too.I think something is up with your return pump and drain not working right together. Could be the sock (I doubt it). Have you experimented with throttling down your return?
Based on your response, my 2 top candidates would be that the return pump isn't maintaining a constant flow, the flow is fluctuating giving you the inconsistent water level, and the other is the need for a gate valve in order to fine tune the water flow through the full siphon. I would suspect that the water level is changing in the overflow as well which points the finger at one of those 2 as being the culprit.
Are you running a beananimal (3 drain pipes) or a herbie (2 drain pipes). I'm sorta hoping for bean animal but your description leads me believe it's a herbie, which is more of a reason to have a gate valve for fine tuning on your full siphon.
While you're at it, can you give clarification of what's the pipe that goes up from the return pump with the ball valve on it? Is that just one of the 2 returns? Or is it for something else?
This changed things, have you tried closing the gate valve that goes through the canister to see if it fixes your problem?Oh, that is for the canister in the picture. You can see the small white tube that is connected to it. For carbon and GFO, but that is usually off. when it is turned on it does change the water level in the chamber.
I don't think this is super complicated. The fact is your dt water level should not be able to raise much above your drain pipe. If it does raise then your drain is having trouble keeping up and needs fixed by reducing the return pump flow or fixing whatever is slowing the drain (maybe the drain is too small.
This changed things, have you tried closing the gate valve that goes through the canister to see if it fixes your problem?
The reason for this is to rule out that the restriction inside the canister is or is not constantly changing.I've always left that valve open, but the canister has a smaller ball valve on the line which is closed until I open it to use the GFO/carbon. I'll try closing the larger ball valve.
How much does the water level in the return section change when you top it up? You are actually changing the head height the pump has to work against. So if the return section is full the pump will pump more water because of the reduced head pressure.
When you add water and the DT level goes up does it go back down as the water evaporates?
Eliminate the canister, put it on its own pump, 1 possible problem solved.
Replace the ball valve for finer control, another 2 possible problems solved.
Take the sock out, another possible 3 problems solved.
Herbie's do have a tendency to fluctuate in the overflow somewhat affecting sump level.
You might have to allow for this. Process of elimination is the only way.