/ Looking for advice/ideas on sediment filtration for water coming out of a culvert - feeding a 5/8” water line
#1
KilroyJC
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- 1962 Case 430, 1995 Craftsman Yard Tractor/mower, 1949 South Bend 9A Lathe, WoodMizer Lx55 sawmill, Kubota KX033-4 Mini-Excavator
DISCLAIMER: YES - I WILL TAKE AND POST SOME PICS LATER TODAY -
Our lot is in a little dead-end valley, and the part that will be farmable once I clear it out - it has not been tended in 50+ years, and there are a good number of substantial trees that need to come down first.
Up on the neighbor’s lot above us is a small, spring-fed pond which drains down two courses through our property. It is about 200’ higher than the bottom of our lot.
a dirt/gravel road goes up our lot to the upper reaches, and the courses run through culverts under the road.
they do not flow much - but they flow steady. They do combine and flow through the middle of our lower area, and the combined flow is probably not more than 15 gal/min and probably is less.
I ran about 700’ of 5/8” black irrigation tubing from the higher-flowing branch, and under the end of the culver pipe I suspended a two-gallon bucket stuffed with open-cell foam that the tubing is mounted to, and the bucket is angled such that the tubing is a couple inches above the bottom.
the problem is that it does not take long for sediment to build up in the bucket and restrict the flow. Because of the open-cell foam, the sediment is pretty fine, so it doesn’t really make a solid plug like a pebble would, but it is necessary to clean the bucket out and restart the siphon action every couple days.
does anyone have any suggestion as to a mechanical separation device or other filter setup that does not require external power that is self-cleaning or at least can go more than a few days at a time without emptying?
thank you!
Our lot is in a little dead-end valley, and the part that will be farmable once I clear it out - it has not been tended in 50+ years, and there are a good number of substantial trees that need to come down first.
Up on the neighbor’s lot above us is a small, spring-fed pond which drains down two courses through our property. It is about 200’ higher than the bottom of our lot.
a dirt/gravel road goes up our lot to the upper reaches, and the courses run through culverts under the road.
they do not flow much - but they flow steady. They do combine and flow through the middle of our lower area, and the combined flow is probably not more than 15 gal/min and probably is less.
I ran about 700’ of 5/8” black irrigation tubing from the higher-flowing branch, and under the end of the culver pipe I suspended a two-gallon bucket stuffed with open-cell foam that the tubing is mounted to, and the bucket is angled such that the tubing is a couple inches above the bottom.
the problem is that it does not take long for sediment to build up in the bucket and restrict the flow. Because of the open-cell foam, the sediment is pretty fine, so it doesn’t really make a solid plug like a pebble would, but it is necessary to clean the bucket out and restart the siphon action every couple days.
does anyone have any suggestion as to a mechanical separation device or other filter setup that does not require external power that is self-cleaning or at least can go more than a few days at a time without emptying?
thank you!