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Posted by Harry K on April 4, 2007, 10:42 pm
> Ron Hardin wrote:
>
> > Paul Franklin wrote:
> > > Put in the type of valve that mounts inline with the outlet pipe
> > > instead of the type that screws into the pump base, and mount it a
> > > foot or two above the pump. Drill a small (1/8") hole in the pipe
> > > right below the valve. The small hole won't matter when the pump is
> > > running, but will allow the short column of water to under the valve
> > > to drain back out when the pump stops.
>
> > Good idea, I'll do that. The hole needn't be near the valve, just
> > not to high above the sump pump, so long as the valve is higher
> > (easiest to install where the pipe couples already, by the ceiling
> > and wall). I have to arrange that the induced stream hits the
> > side of the sump well, and that the spash doesn't hit my flood alarm
> > sensor, I guess. Should be easy.
>
> Advice to the next guy to drill a 1/8" hole in the pipe, don't
> angle it upwards (say the cordless drill doesn't _quite_ fit in the
> well and so you angle it a bit upwards). You get quite a stream of
> water when the sump comes on, and it follows the angle that the
> drill made very exactly. Even though it's easier than taking the
> pump out of the well.
>
> A downward ricochet off the far well wall would have been nicer than
> an upwards one.
> --
> Ron Hardin
> rhhar...@mindspring.com
>
> On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
Not very elegant, but just hang a towel or similar so it drapes over
the hole. It will corral all the jet. More 'non-redneck' would be to
put a collar around the pipe so it directs the jet straight down.
Harry K
Harry K
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