Hi again, now I have time to work on this once more.
Jim:
1) I will try changing the slope just to see if I can force the model to block out all channel interaction, but I have my doubts (since changing the river width to increase velocity did not work). I don't really consider this a viable option for the model, but just a way to see if I can get rid of the apparent deposition.
2) I agree, we already expected landslides to play a major role in sediment contribution to the river (see the attached picture). I am not so worried about my inability to reproduce the observed values as the inability to get sed_in to match sed_out. It seems like it should be theoretically possible with your suggestions, but I'm not seeing the expected results. The observed sediment concentrations are from ADCP measurements, and I'm pretty certain the vast majority is inorganic (once again see the picture). I will double check his though.
Natalja:
My measurements are from ADCP so I suppose it's SS, I will investigate how much of this might be organic, but it seems unlikely that it's a very high fraction (the attached picture shows the extreme erosion in the catchment).
You're right, changing river widths is not necessarily accurate, my main concern so far has not been to reproduce reality as much as getting the main processes the way I want them (which starts with my sed_in/sed_out issue that just won't be solved). Now it's almost a matter of principle, it should be possible to exclude channel deposition/erosion, but nothing I try seems to work. I was just starting to play with ch_n2 when I had to change my focus to some other projects, I will also check that now. I will check what is going on with lat_sed in the model, but unfortunately I don't have much data for the catchment beyond climate inputs and observed discharge and sediment concentration in the river.
I can't find much literature on sub-daily sediment simulations in SWAT, and it seems like most people I talk to here have not used SWAT for that. It might be that it is not possible to simulate my catchment due to unsimulated processes like landslides and bank failures, but even if that weren't the case I'd still have the same weird issues concerning sed_in vs sed_out. I must say I'm becoming very sceptical to the sub-daily sediment processes in SWAT. I might be missing something obvious since I'm not able to understand the source code and I'm not an expert on sediments...
Thank you for your suggestions and feedback.
Best regards,
Bendik