BullwinkleII wrote:
RupertofOZ wrote:
I think you'd be better off with a standard overflow standpipe rather than a siphon in the case of "cascading beds"...
Siphons can be notoriously unreliable if the flow is too high... or too low...
Any siphons downstream from the first will trigger without any great amount of calibration because the inflow from the dump of the previous GB will trigger it, and there are no problems with stopping, because there is no water flow at that stage in the cycle, so there is no option but to stop.
It becomes a non issue.
Not necessarily... if your pump flow is too great into the first grow bed... the siphon might be overwealmed and not initiate at all....
Or, as you'd still be pumping (most siphon systems are constantly pumped)... they may not break...
Similarly... if the siphon in the first growbed doesn't initiate, or stop properly... the flow into the second may not be enough to initiate the second siphon etc...
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And the reason I suggest a siphon system was to save water.
If you cascade with a timer and siphons, you pump a little more than one GB of water to the top, switch off the pump, and then that one bed of water is all that's missing from the FT. That one bed of water, moves through the system. (or at least through that run)
Huh??.... it might... if you happen to set the timer to exactly the right time to initiate the first grow bed siphon... and if it drains enough to actually fill the second bed... and trigger the siphon.. etc...
More likely, you'd end up with at least one, or more beds partially filled to various degrees...
And how many timer cycles would be required to actually move the water from the first bed... through the rest... and back to the tank....
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By dividing the system into different runs, you can stagger them with different timers and smaller pumps to take only a minimum amount of water from the system. If you cascade standard overflow standpipes, in order to ensure the last bed gets flooded, you would need to keep the flow up to all the beds for a lot longer. Because the wave that cascades along the run doesnt have the flow stopper in the form of the siphons, the wave is a long slow drawn out one. If you tun off the pump after the first bed is full, the third and forth will be filling before the first has drained. This will mean the last bed wont ever see high tide. It will also mean a lot more water will be required to populate that "wave" that cascades through the beds.
I don't know where to start with this... multiple timers and pumps.... what the??
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I've done lots of experiments with siphons cascading into other siphons, and the result is always that the dump from a siphon makes a completely reliable trigger for the next, and the stop is inevitable because there is no water flowing at that point, so the bed drains and the siphon stops.
Calibrating the siphon at the top of a run is as simple as adjusting a tap. I don't ever need to do anything to my siphon and I've used the same one with pumps putting out very different flow rates (just over 50 lph to 3000 lph) because I just added a tap to control flow.
Probably true... if you set the flow into the first bed using a ball valve...
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You could also cascade using siphons and a sequencer like Rup's flow splitter or my
DIY sequencer. I think you can also use a device called a Flout, and there are many others.
Again possibly... with a flout... but the sequencing valve needs an interuption of flow from the pump to initiate....
It's just all so complicated... and I just don't see any benefit what so ever in using a timer with a siphon...
KISS...
Just use a timer and overflow standpipe... with the beds individually draining back to the tank... the drain will begin (slowly) as soon as the pump cycle begins... and during a typical 15 min cycle... a 500L grow bed (actually more like about 300l of volume adjusted for the media)... is filled well within the 15 minutes... and the majority of the water is delivered back to the tank via the overflow...
We're talking a 10000L tank... and about 3-4000L (max if all beds are full) of grow bed flood....
If the draw down is too great... due to the drain/flow being too slow returning to the tank... put in a sump tank with a float activated pump... to chuck the water back to the fish tank faster... ala the BYAP Family/Deluxe systems...
If all else fails... then use a sequencing valve... with the grow beds "banked/grouped"... and a timer/standpipe...
Simple.... and near faultless...