rollmydoodie
Member
Hi, the question is simple, can 2 water pumps be ran on the same 'closed loop'? The reason I ask is because I'm going to be building a homemade manifold using PVC pipe and EZ Clone sprayers to use on (2)-4x4 flood tables, (I want 42 sprayers per table). So a total of 84 sprayers on 2 pumps. According to my Gardener's Digest the 120 site EZ Cloner has 23 sprayers and uses a 1000 GPH pump, so that's 43 GPH per sprayer, while the 30 site uses 17 sprayers and a 450 GPH pump, or 26 GPH per sprayer. So I was thinking 30-35 GPH per sprayer should be plenty and each pump would need to output 1260-1470 GPH to accomplish what I want, and should one pump fail each sprayer would still have 15-17.5 GPH.
Instead of running each table independently and being susceptible to plant loss in the event of pump failure, I thought I'd run both pumps on a closed loop that way if one failed the other would be able to provide half the output to each table and hopefully save the day!
The benefits of the setup in the pic are;
-if I added close off valves in front and behind each reservoir I could have an extra reservoir that has been ph balanced and nuted and easily swap it out in like 5 minutes instead of tryin to drain, fill, balance and connect during my 5 minute pump off cycle, also having the pump outside the reservoir would keep res temps down and also allow for easy maintenance should it become necessary, and the strongest benefit being that if 1 pump failed the other would just pick up the slack.
In theory it seems it would work, but my only concern would be that the high output from each pump would bog the other pump down, resulting in more pump failure, but maybe this isn't the case since they are low pressure. Perhaps I could add 2 check valves, so any thought on this would be awesome as well.
Any experience/thoughts are much appreciated! Thanks
Instead of running each table independently and being susceptible to plant loss in the event of pump failure, I thought I'd run both pumps on a closed loop that way if one failed the other would be able to provide half the output to each table and hopefully save the day!
The benefits of the setup in the pic are;
-if I added close off valves in front and behind each reservoir I could have an extra reservoir that has been ph balanced and nuted and easily swap it out in like 5 minutes instead of tryin to drain, fill, balance and connect during my 5 minute pump off cycle, also having the pump outside the reservoir would keep res temps down and also allow for easy maintenance should it become necessary, and the strongest benefit being that if 1 pump failed the other would just pick up the slack.
In theory it seems it would work, but my only concern would be that the high output from each pump would bog the other pump down, resulting in more pump failure, but maybe this isn't the case since they are low pressure. Perhaps I could add 2 check valves, so any thought on this would be awesome as well.
Any experience/thoughts are much appreciated! Thanks
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