Lime water/Kalkwasser pump help.
I asked before and can not find my notes what you all said.
What pumps is there to pump from my Kalkwasser water to the sump upstairs 8 feet up. |
probably a maxijet 1200 would do it, given a small line: maxijets are very tolerant of on-off switching. Problem is---a kalk reactor's drip line likes to be on the flat relative to the sump: it doesn't climb very well. That's why they call it a drip.
If your topoff is downstairs, can you possibly put the sump and kalk downstairs too? I have my whole support rig in my basement and it sure eliminates a lot of noise. All we hear upstairs is the gurgle of the downflow. I run mine off an Iwaki 100, on a 15 foot rise, and should have gotten an Iwaki 50...way overpowered. But I believe that if you're only using the typical 1/4 locline drip line from the maxijet, it can make that rise: the bigger the line the harder the climb, and it pushes a 1/2 inch line up 4 feet with no problem. |
[QUOTE][i]<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=11116607#post11116607 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Sk8r [/i]
[B]probably a maxijet 1200 would do it, given a small line: maxijets are very tolerant of on-off switching. Problem is---a kalk reactor's drip line likes to be on the flat relative to the sump: it doesn't climb very well. That's why they call it a drip. If your topoff is downstairs, can you possibly put the sump and kalk downstairs too? I have my whole support rig in my basement and it sure eliminates a lot of noise. All we hear upstairs is the gurgle of the downflow. I run mine off an Iwaki 100, on a 15 foot rise, and should have gotten an Iwaki 50...way overpowered. But I believe that if you're only using the typical 1/4 locline drip line from the maxijet, it can make that rise: the bigger the line the harder the climb, and it pushes a 1/2 inch line up 4 feet with no problem. [/B][/QUOTE] I will try that thanks. Anyone have more for me? |
I use a Litermeter 3 to pump up my Kalk from the basement. I set it to run for 8 hours a night to deliver 2 gallons which is my evaporation. No issues
|
I use a litermeter. I used a cole parmer before. Any peristaltic pump will work w/o having to worry about clogging/corrosion/etc. over a long term usage.
|
[QUOTE][i]<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=11119488#post11119488 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by DrBDC [/i]
[B]I use a litermeter. I used a cole parmer before. Any peristaltic pump will work w/o having to worry about clogging/corrosion/etc. over a long term usage. [/B][/QUOTE] DrBDC, I looked at a MSC supply book at work and got a Mityflex it is cheaper then the litermeter 3 by $190. I got it today and it comes with differant size tubing and rollers to let pump how many ml/min you need. It pumps a lot up to 29 feet. Thank you for your help on this. |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:39 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.