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This is totally OT for this group -- except the group contains a lot of
obviously clever people who are professionally interested in aerodynamic and fluid flows and pressures, pipes, valves, and the like, and maybe someone will be entertained by the following odd bathroom sink behavior. Our newly remodeled bathroom has a circular glass above-counter sink like a hemispherical glass salad bowl, about 18" in diameter at the top and 7" deep, with a push down-pop up drain plug in the bottom center, and a pretty high capacity faucet above it. Standard elbow fitting and drain pipe going into the wall underneath the sink and counter top. With the drain open, turn the faucet on full force: water gets dumped into the sink considerable faster than it can drain out and the water level in the sink rises rapidly up to the rim, on the verge of overflowing, in 20 or 30 seconds. At the last second turn the faucet part way off -- down to roughly 50% of full flow, more or less -- then trim the flow until inflow rate just equals outflow, so the water level stays just 1/4 inch or so below the rim. Then leave it in this steady-state condition, and wait. For approximately *eight minutes* (by the watch) the resulting situation remains perfectly stable, with water level hovering just below the overflow point. Then, all of sudden, water level starts dropping. Turn faucet back up to full flow. Water level continues dropping, keeps dropping faster in fact, until sink is essentially empty, and the full force input that initially caused the sink to fill now roars down the drain with only 1/2' or so of water swirling around the drain in the bottom. This continues as long as I want to watch. This doesn't seem to result from just blowing some temporary clog out of the drain: I've repeated it three times, several hours apart, with essentially identical behavior. I'm at a loss to explain how it happens, except to hypothesize that maybe there's some point underground and quite a ways further down the drain where the drain pipe has a long slow rise, then a drop, and in some way the initial slower flow has to fill the rising section until a siphon action gets going over the top? That doesn't really sound persuasive, however. Anyone have any other ideas? |
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