ChatterBank1 min ago
What Is The Best Pond Pump?
3 Answers
My old pond pump has seized its last breath!. Can anyone suggest a replacement pump to move water from zero to five feet header tank,
which has a weed and debris filter which is easy to maintain?.
Sorry to spoil the run of the mill chat on a Thursday night. But thanks anyway!.
which has a weed and debris filter which is easy to maintain?.
Sorry to spoil the run of the mill chat on a Thursday night. But thanks anyway!.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I’ve never had much success with dedicated pond pumps; they are invariably limited in power and at the first grain of debris, cease operation.
I have a small garden pond with a capacity of around 4,000 litres and I use one of these:-
http:// www.scr ewfix.c om/p/ti tan-ttb 582pmp- 400w-au tomatic -dirty- water-p ump-240 v/65041
The problem is that it is too powerful at 400W, ideally I’d want one rated at 100-200W (but such things don’t appear to be available). I operate the pump via a timer for only 15 minutes a day, which is adequate to aerate the water and keep the water clean; the cost of the electric works out at less than 2p/day.
A further problem is that the pump is supplied with an earth leakage trip integral to the mains plug, which requires resetting with the loss of power. I chopped this off, fitting a normal plug, supplying the power via an isolating transformer (for safety). If you remove the safety plug supplied, make sure that there is some earth leakage or isolation protection within the installation.
To stop fish being sushied by the submersed pump, I placed it within a bucket with netting placed over the bucket top.
The pump instructions state that it is not suitable for use as a pond pump; but it works OK for me.
I have a small garden pond with a capacity of around 4,000 litres and I use one of these:-
http://
The problem is that it is too powerful at 400W, ideally I’d want one rated at 100-200W (but such things don’t appear to be available). I operate the pump via a timer for only 15 minutes a day, which is adequate to aerate the water and keep the water clean; the cost of the electric works out at less than 2p/day.
A further problem is that the pump is supplied with an earth leakage trip integral to the mains plug, which requires resetting with the loss of power. I chopped this off, fitting a normal plug, supplying the power via an isolating transformer (for safety). If you remove the safety plug supplied, make sure that there is some earth leakage or isolation protection within the installation.
To stop fish being sushied by the submersed pump, I placed it within a bucket with netting placed over the bucket top.
The pump instructions state that it is not suitable for use as a pond pump; but it works OK for me.