ChadO
Active member
Greetings,
I am beginning to run my plumbing for the Bean Animal overflow, and it is going to be a decent amount of work to run the emergency drain (3rd and final pipe in the BA setup) over to skimmer section of my sump. The skimmer section is where the first two pipes of the system drop into. It would, however, be quite manageable to run the emergency drain line into the return pump section of my sump.
So, my thoughts are this: The emergency drain always stays dry until either the first two drains are plugged or obstructed. Worst case, they are both obstructed, and we have to go full on the emergency drain. In this situation, the water would basically cycle right from the tank to the return pump section and go back to the main tank - until the siphon is broken. Hopefully, that system wouldn't run this long in this scenario since I would - if possible - attend to the situation since my emergency drain was engaged, and that would mean something needed to be fixed. However, if I wasn't readily available, it should - in my mind - simply cycle the water through the system, but not flood.
For those with much more experience than I, does this logic hold up? Is there something that I am missing and need to consider? I would rather have a optimal drain path (into the return pump section) for that drain, than a sub-optimal routing just to get it over to where the other pipes are at.
FWIW, my sump setup is pretty standard. From left to right, the fuge, return pump section, the skimmer section. The traditional 3 baffle setup, and a 4th baffle separating the sections. The DT is a 75 gallon, the sump a 30 gallon long w/ 10.6 gallon reserve space.
Thanks!
ChadO
I am beginning to run my plumbing for the Bean Animal overflow, and it is going to be a decent amount of work to run the emergency drain (3rd and final pipe in the BA setup) over to skimmer section of my sump. The skimmer section is where the first two pipes of the system drop into. It would, however, be quite manageable to run the emergency drain line into the return pump section of my sump.
So, my thoughts are this: The emergency drain always stays dry until either the first two drains are plugged or obstructed. Worst case, they are both obstructed, and we have to go full on the emergency drain. In this situation, the water would basically cycle right from the tank to the return pump section and go back to the main tank - until the siphon is broken. Hopefully, that system wouldn't run this long in this scenario since I would - if possible - attend to the situation since my emergency drain was engaged, and that would mean something needed to be fixed. However, if I wasn't readily available, it should - in my mind - simply cycle the water through the system, but not flood.
For those with much more experience than I, does this logic hold up? Is there something that I am missing and need to consider? I would rather have a optimal drain path (into the return pump section) for that drain, than a sub-optimal routing just to get it over to where the other pipes are at.
FWIW, my sump setup is pretty standard. From left to right, the fuge, return pump section, the skimmer section. The traditional 3 baffle setup, and a 4th baffle separating the sections. The DT is a 75 gallon, the sump a 30 gallon long w/ 10.6 gallon reserve space.
Thanks!
ChadO