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| European Version 230 V – 50 Hz | American Version 120 V – 60 Hz | |
| Flow rate: | 3.200 l/h | 850 gph |
| Consumption: | 52 watt | 55 watt |
| Head max: | 2,9 meter | 115 in |
| Width: | 12,5 cm | 4.93 in |
| Depth: | 8 cm | 3.15 in |
| Height: | 12,7 cm | 5.00 in |
| Price: | 114,90 euros | $99 USD + VAT |
The Rossmont Riser 3200 claims to have an energy efficiency equal to 61.54 liters per every consumed watt. An economic efficiency equal to 27.85 liters per second per euro and thus a reference value of 4,640 l*m/h. At a relatively low cost of 114,90 euros we can acquire a great pump, which has a fixed flow rate and prevalence, but you only have to add the Rossmont Waver for it to transform into an adjustable, hyper modern pump. The economic efficiency is good, especially when including the Waver, whereas the technical efficiency is ordinary. But this is all on paper; let’s see what we measured and how it gets included in the values that we have measured up to now for every other pump (on page 3). At present, it’s the pump I use for my aquarium.
The construction
The pump is simple. Square. In a two-tone black and white livery. 
The impeller has a traditional form, and 6 straight blades which rotate around a ceramic shaft, held by the two traditional pads. Dimensions are not too big.
How to control the Riser pump with the Waver

Head Max Trial
The first trial we did was measuring the prevalence. As you know, the prevalence is the pump’s capacity to elevate water over a certain altitude. To do that, we measured the water level reached inside a rubber hose. We didn’t measure every single intermediary step as we usually do, because, as we wrote on the previous page, there are no intermediary steps. But we can choose any step seamlessly. 
We measured a maximum head equal to 2.81 meters against the declared 2.9 meters. The difference between the declared and measured prevalence is equal to 3%. A remarkable result.
Flow Rate Trial
Measuring the flow rate was easy thanks to the DigiSavant DIGIFLOW 6710M flowmeter. First, we linked our connecting hoses to our flowmeter, as you can see in the following picture: 
The measurement is expressed in liters per minute; we multiplied the result by 60 to get the liters per hour. We’d like to point out that the measurement applies within the conditions under which we did the measurements. The connecting hose could have induced some losses in the system. 

Characteristic Curve
The characteristic curve is the specific curve that combines the various flow rate values and head max. It’s not possible without the adequate equipment to recreate such a curve. Moreover, in this specific case it was very complicated to measure every potentiometer setting’s prevalence, since there were no established intermediate points. So we settled for combining the flow rate and prevalence at two extreme points. 
Energy Consumption Trial
Collecting the instant consumption was made possible thanks to the the convenient RCE PM600 which is able to measure even the Cos(fi) (o discrepancy). The result is immediately provided in watts. 
Our comments
As we usually tell ourselves over and over again, the adjustable electronic pump is one of the best things to have in our sumps, for a lot of reasons. The simplicity of being able to vary the power to adapt to the aquarium’s conditions is, at least in my opinion, priceless. With the Riser‘s calibration function you can change the water without having to turn off the return pump, and this is, for me, extremely convenient. Moreover, it’s possible to feed the corals by eliminating all of the aquarium’s flow. In addition, you can activate it through a tablet, smartphone, apple watch, or similar devices. 
The comparison with other pumps
The following chart turns out to be very interesting; I have inserted the measured values of other pumps, such as Eheim, Tunze, Sicce, Corallinea, Waveline, and Ecotech Marine, which we could test previously, as you can read on our reviews page. They’re sorted by what we determined to be the product of the flow rate multiplied by the head max divided by half. This way you get the area underlined by the two dimensions. 
The relation with the declared data
Let’s see how our measurements compare with the data declared by the manufacturer. Head Max
| pump | head max | measurement | deviation |
| Rossmont Riser 3200 | 290 cm | 281 cm | – 3.1 % |
The maximum prevalence measurement has a minimal deviation. Completely insignificant. The Riser keeps its promises. Flow Rate
| pump | flow rate | lab measurement | deviation |
| Rossmont Riser 3200 | 3,200 l/h | 2,766 l/h | – 13.6 % |
The deviation between measured and declared flow rate is close to 14%, an incredible result especially taking into account the much higher differences we found in other pumps. Energy Consumption
| pump | consumption | lab measurement | deviation |
| Rossmont Riser 3200 | 52 w | 53.7 w | + 3.3 % |
The energy consumption is just over 3%. Great confidence with the declared data.
Correspondence compared to the declared data
Finally, only as a frame of reference, we give a correspondence value compared to the manufacturer’s declared data for flow rate, prevalence, and consumption.
| pump | head max | flow rate | consumption | Final Value (in absolute terms) |
| Rossmont Riser 3200 | 96.9 % | 86.4 % | 103.3% | 93.3 % |
To understand if the pump will do the trick, based on your aquarium’s prevalence I suggest you read the following articles:
The second one particularly will show you the estimated flow rate in your aquarium based on your boundary conditions.
Conclusions
The Rossmont Riser 3200 reference value at maximum power equals 388,623 l*cm/s, while the declared value is 464,000. Please keep in mind that the reference value is represented by the area underlined by the flow rate and prevalence values, simplified by the maximum values. Basically, the formula is (flow rate x prevalence)/2.
The 16% loss actually represents a great value, since all of the direct competitors are a lot worse.
We still have to consider what the pump can deliver. It was good of Rossmont to adhere to the declared values, but we have to choose a pump based on the fact that, having our measured data, it can do the trick for us and maybe cost a little bit less than the competitors, while possibly adding something more. Of course you have to consider that to the pump’s cost, so that you can have all of the setting-induced options, you have to add the Waver‘s cost.
PROS Great performance and very close to the declared values
The pump is adjustable on every accessible flow rate value
Very well built
Extremely quiet
We really liked the calibration modality that stops the tank-sump exchange
Cost-effective pump without regulation, at the top for economic efficiency CONS
High price with the optional Waver module
| Build Quality | |
| Quality | |
| Price Performance |
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Disclaimer: We’d like to thank Rossmont for letting us use the Rossmont Riser 3200 pump for this review. [Translated by Matilde Capannini]
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