Maccabee
Well-Known Member
Good to know.I am sure that all sump pumps meant to pump water out of a crock and put it on the ground outside need a check valve. ...
Yes, but the same amount of space isn't always available for the water--the roots will eventually fill up the cups and less water will be needed to reach the same flood level. I'd rather it go somewhere other than out the bottom of the cabinet and onto the appliances below.You don't need to adjust your height on the fly to make sure you get overflow and there is not any purpose in doing so unless you just like the sound. A 500 gallon/ hour pump will pump the same amount of water in a given time period all the time.
With the overflow I can run the timer for the same amount of time--always-- and the water will always reach the same level--and if the overflow is adjustable I can vary that level depending upon the needs of the plants (higher when they first go in...) I don't need to constantly fiddle with the flood time as the cups fill up faster.
I'm not dealing with all that, myself. I just wanted to point out that a looped system will accomodate pumps that a single fill/drain line will not. Including external inline transfer pumps or sump/utility pumps. I'd agree it's unnecessary for most situations.You are making a project out of a job. Throw that check valve away and let the system run, measure the height of the water, when its were you want it, about 1/2 the height of your pots is adequate, set your timer to run that amount of time. It will always pump that amount of water in that amount of time. KISS . VV