- Location
- Coram, Long Island
I'm posting this in case it helps anyone out-- the issue was driving me crazy for a while. It's quite possible everyone already knows this but me, so bear with me...
My tank is in my living room, so it needs to be quiet. It has a 3/4" return, and a 1" drain. Both are drilled in the back about 4" from the top of the tank. No overflow box, just a strainer on an elbow. I was running the return pump with a ball valve at about half pressure to keep it quiet. Anything more and the drain would sound like a toilet. I had it this way for about 6 months. I know that I didn't need to turn over the tank 100X/hr, but I could have used some more flow without filling up the tank with ph's.
I have read about dursos, but I don't like the idea of hard plumbing behind the tank, and I didn't want anything obtrusive inside if I didn't have to. It seemed that the problem was air couldn't escape fast enough without creating a syphon which sounded like a freakin toilet. I just had to figure out a way to introduce air. What I came up with is simple (and may be common knowledge to everyone else). I drilled a 1/4" hole in the end of the strainer, and stuck an air tube in there. You feed the tube in (about an inch) until you hear it sucking air, and you're all done. I was able to open up the pump all the way, and it's quieter than ever. I actually had to put one of those air hose silencers on the end of the air hose because that became the loudest thing on my tank.
My strainer looks like this:
My tank is in my living room, so it needs to be quiet. It has a 3/4" return, and a 1" drain. Both are drilled in the back about 4" from the top of the tank. No overflow box, just a strainer on an elbow. I was running the return pump with a ball valve at about half pressure to keep it quiet. Anything more and the drain would sound like a toilet. I had it this way for about 6 months. I know that I didn't need to turn over the tank 100X/hr, but I could have used some more flow without filling up the tank with ph's.
I have read about dursos, but I don't like the idea of hard plumbing behind the tank, and I didn't want anything obtrusive inside if I didn't have to. It seemed that the problem was air couldn't escape fast enough without creating a syphon which sounded like a freakin toilet. I just had to figure out a way to introduce air. What I came up with is simple (and may be common knowledge to everyone else). I drilled a 1/4" hole in the end of the strainer, and stuck an air tube in there. You feed the tube in (about an inch) until you hear it sucking air, and you're all done. I was able to open up the pump all the way, and it's quieter than ever. I actually had to put one of those air hose silencers on the end of the air hose because that became the loudest thing on my tank.
My strainer looks like this:



