Hi Chelle,
congratulations!
pretty amazing!
you are now a graduate with summa cum laude
please tell me where to send your degree
Your summaries are tops. They clearly indicate your thorough understanding.
the remaining questions are mainly connected to your not yet completely understanding the difference between different drain systems and where to use them.
To get off with a good start:
Please stop using the description Venturi in referral to drains
Mr. Giovanni Battista Venturi (1746 - 1822) is getting very restless in his grave every time his name is used in vain
drains (which all work by grace of gravity) are far beneath his level (pun intended)
Mr. Venturi works with pressure drops and mixing media thanks to these pressure drops
gravity helps with that, but Mr. Venturi goes beyond that: if gravity refuses to help... well to hell with gravity: then he will simply create vacuum just for the fun of it
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovanni_Battista_Venturihttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venturi_effecttruly a remarkable man.
now to drains:
on one level there are three basic types of drains:
1. bottom drains. I believe they need little explanation. These will let go a mixture of top and bottom layers of water.
2. overflow drains. These let go only the top layer of water. They will leave all water below the "overflow" level in the tank.
3. siphon drains which let go the bottom or intermediate layer of water. These will normally drain a tank completely if sunk to the bottom or drain it to the intermediate level at which their lowest point is installed.
Then there are combinations of these three basic types.
On another level there are two types of drains:
"continuous" drains
and
"batch" drains.
I hope I use the right vocabulary to make this self explanatory.
In a CHIFT (CHIFT, CHIFT, CHIFT,...) PIST AP system, to keep it simple, you need both types: continuously flowing (as long as there is a supply of water) drains on the fish tank(s):
they will feed the growbeds, filling them more or less slowly
and "batch" drains on these growbeds,
drains that stay closed while the filling takes place and are triggered to open and drain when a certain level is reached in the growbeds.
As you are already familiar with the concept, you might consider these as NC drains. Their rest (=Normal) position is Closed. NC.
When a certain level is reached, they act like a switch that is flipped and open their exit for a more or less fast drain.
when the growbed is emptied, the drain returns to it's "rest" position, which is... yes, NC. Normally (= rest position) Closed.
There are a number of ways to achieve this:
flouts, loop autosiphons, bell autosiphons, float autosiphons ... (not limited to this list)
which all are mechanically or hydraulically activated
but also electrically activated:
the combination of a solenoid valve with one or two level switches (one top level, one bottom level) can form a "batch" drain
so can the combination of a pump with one or two level switches (one top level, one bottom level) form a "batch" drain ... (again not limited to this list).
I hope you understand.
I think the above explanation makes it easy to understand that there is one ground rule for "batch" drains to function properly: the draining must be noticeably faster than the filling. Else the growbed will never empty and the cycle will stall.
... Unless...
unless you can interrupt the filling while the draining takes place
Then draining and filling can be as slow or as fast as you wish.
Electrically activated this is simple and easy: two solenoid valves, one on the filling and one on the draining, and one or two level switches (one top level, one bottom level) that simultaneously close one valve and open the other and vice versa.
Mechanically activated that is more complicated but I believe it can be done.
Combining electrical and mechanical/hydraulical activation gives more options.
Then there is a question of priming: some drains need no priming (i.e. bottom drains), some are self priming (i.e. overflow drains), and some need priming (i.e. over the rim siphon drains).
I believe I have covered it all or just about.
One more thing about flouts: I think they are wonderful
But they have two drawbacks which are:
that they must be installed in the tank or growbed (or in a connected tank or growbed) they are supposed to drain
and that they take up a lot of space.
And don't think that they need no designing: the flout must positively float as long as level is not reached
but it must positively sink at the moment this level is reached.
Unless for high flow (higher than needed in AP) they offer no real advantages
A loop autosiphon will perform just as well.
I don't think that the speed of draining has much effect on aeration of roots or water; it is the ebb and flow that achieves this
faster will be better, but I guess the difference will be almost unnoticeable. Of course I could be wrong.
So with what I know I would opt for loop autosiphons: they are exterior, don't take up growbed space and are easily and visually level adjustable.
Being exterior, maintenance should be easier too (my opinion only, not based on experience).
your remaining questions:
choice of voltage and AC/DC is free to the user
Simply put: for the same power transfer the higher the voltage (= the power differential), the lower the amperage (= the speed of transfer) you must use.
The same cable can transport more power at 24 V than at 12 V, more power at 400 V than at 220 V ...
compare it with transporting air and water though the same tube: in the case of air, more volume will be transported, in the case of water, more mass will be transported.
the main difference between AC and DC is that by alternating the current you can pump even more power through the same section of cable without it heating up.
Consider a boxer: while one uppercut might decide a fight, the incessant consequence of left/right/left/right/left/right is far harder on the opponent and easier on the attacker.
I don't know if these comparisons are scientifically correct, but I hope they explain things.
12/24 VAC are used for backup and solar and cars and trucks, 110, 220 and 400 and 660 VAC are used from the grid.
using a windmill to produce electricity means you are converting mechanical power into electrical power.
That seems to be a good thing since you can stock electricity in batteries for future use.
But when you wish to operate a pump you need to reconvert his electrical power into mechanical power.
All conversions mean efficiency losses. On average far over 30% per step (and I'm being generous).
So wind power to mechanical power = 30% losses (1 kW wind => 0.7 kW mechanical power)
plus mechanical power to electrical power = 30% losses of the remaining 70 % (0.7 kW mechanical power => 0.49 kW electrical power)
plus electrical back to mechanical = 30% losses of the remaining 70 % of the remaining 70 % (0.49 kW electrical power => 0.34 kW mechanical power)
so that means that, in the best of circumstances, you will waste 66% of your original wind power.
Compare this to using the wind to pump water to your header tank:
Wind power to mechanical power = 30% losses (1 kW wind => 0.7 kW mechanical power)
plus...
plus nothing: you have the water where you want it: stocked in the upper tank
You need no pump to bring it there: it is already there.
So you lose only 30% of wind energy compared to 66 % losses.
And you need no generator, no batteries, no complicated regulation circuits and no electrical pump (if you only work on wind energy, else you need an electrical pump). The windmill is your uphill pump.
The upper tank is your battery. Gravity is your downhill pump.
And the wind energy is stocked in the upper tank, ready to use whenever needed.
If your aim is pumping water, generators and batteries are completely redundant. Wind will pump water directly to where you want it: in your battery.
I would rather invest in water filled tank space than in electricity filled batteries, as tanks in an AP system are the most important elements and can be put to lots of uses.
thank you for this wonderful opportunity to explain
every teacher (I don't pretend to be one) deserves a good pupil like you to help him with structuring his material
I truly am enjoying myself, thanks again
so feel free to ask whatever comes to mind.
greetings
Frank