How do Anti-Siphon Valves Work
How do anti siphon valves work? I'm told that you use these to shut-off a flow, when the flow is higher than normal.
I'm googling a schematic to see how these work, but luck so far.
I've come across posts in other forums where people have used anti-siphon valves on a fuel tank, with fuel being suction fed into the engine/generator. If you have a break in this scenario, wouldn't the fuel flow just stop since you loose suction (or reduced and choke the pump)? Does an anti-siphon valve add anything in this instance?
anti siphon valves are basically check valves. a common design is a
swing check valve with a flap hinged at the top. when water flows
through the valve the flap opens. when the flow stops the flap shuts
perpendicular to the pipe wall due to a stop, which prevents the water
downstream of the valve from flowing back upstream.
i think the
situation you are talking about is a set up where you have a fuel line
to a tank below the level of the fuel, with a loop that goes above the
tank level, back down and then to the engine. if there is a break in
the line right before the engine, the entire tank can drain out into the
environment due to the siphoning effect. if the line breaks, the anti
siphon valve (which is set at the top of the loop perpendicular to the
fuel line with one side open to atmosphere) will introduce atmospheric
air into the fuel line and break the siphon effect so you dont drain the
entire tank. during normal operation, the anti siphon valve shuts and
does not allow fuel to spray out the top of the loop.
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