I can't get my Herbie overflow to pull full siphon, and I can't figure out why. I thought maybe it wasn't enough flow, but even ~600gph didn't change anything (except the amount of air bubbles). I also can't figure out where all the air is even coming from! I'm absolutely stumped.
Here's what it looks like running the Neptune Cor-15 return pump at 50% (which would be 750gph minus head pressure):
And here's what it looks like running it at 3% (45gph minus head pressure):
Here's how the overflow is set up:
And here's what my plumbing underneath looks like:
I know it would have been great to avoid that horizontal span as much as possible, but I read that a short one wouldn't make much difference. Plus, even if it did, wouldn't it just prolong the time it took to achieve full siphon? This thing ran for almost 24 hours and there was no change in the amount of air bubbles.
The gate valve is dialed in to where the water level is right at the top of the emergency pipe. (I get a trickle down it every time the powerheads make the water wave just a little too much.)
Every single joint is cemented thoroughly. Only the connections at the sump bulkhead aren't cemented. I did put a little caulk around the top (that's what the white stuff is) to see if maybe air was getting sucked in that way. It didn't make any difference.
I just can't figure out where that constant supply of air could be coming from. The DT and overflow are both 100% free of air bubbles.
I appreciate any wisdom you have!
Here's what it looks like running the Neptune Cor-15 return pump at 50% (which would be 750gph minus head pressure):
And here's what it looks like running it at 3% (45gph minus head pressure):
Here's how the overflow is set up:
And here's what my plumbing underneath looks like:
I know it would have been great to avoid that horizontal span as much as possible, but I read that a short one wouldn't make much difference. Plus, even if it did, wouldn't it just prolong the time it took to achieve full siphon? This thing ran for almost 24 hours and there was no change in the amount of air bubbles.
The gate valve is dialed in to where the water level is right at the top of the emergency pipe. (I get a trickle down it every time the powerheads make the water wave just a little too much.)
Every single joint is cemented thoroughly. Only the connections at the sump bulkhead aren't cemented. I did put a little caulk around the top (that's what the white stuff is) to see if maybe air was getting sucked in that way. It didn't make any difference.
I just can't figure out where that constant supply of air could be coming from. The DT and overflow are both 100% free of air bubbles.
I appreciate any wisdom you have!