Sump pump questions
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@mik said in Sump pump questions:
Wow..if it's wood or laminate you really need a great sump pump setup. Is your house sited high? In other words will rain water naturally flow away from your foundation?
The house is sited relatively high. Most of the foundation around the house drains away, which is nice, but the pump does run during a heavy rain or during snowmelt.
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OK that's good. How old is the house? That's likely how old the sump pump is. They can look awful and still be fairly new. They exist in an environment of muddy water.
I'd definitely get a batter backup. Not sure I'd bother with the others if your house is fairly new.
It doesn't look like you've had any flooding, and I suspect you have a dry basement. Only an idiot would put down engineered hardwood in a basement that gets wet.
That said, there are plenty of idiots out there....
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@mik said in Sump pump questions:
The house is 2005, agreed that's probably how old the pump is. There has been no flooding in the basement AFAIK.
I guess even if I had a spare pump on standby, it would be awfully difficult to install it with a flooded sump hole, lol! I think I'll just test the pump twice a year, get the battery backup, and (eventually) look at installing a new pump just because of age.
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What I have always had is a portable submersible pump for emergencies, etc. Comes in handy for little kid swimming pools, etc. But you have to have a long enough hose to run the output into a laundry sink or something. Not sure if you have something like that. You don't want to run it out a window since it would just end up back in your sump pit. Needs to run to the sewer.
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Alright so I have a few items coming from Amazon. Bezos wants to fly again, right? He needs funds!
Got a battery, box, and a power inverter I can mount on the wall. The sump pump plugs into the inverter, which is connected to both the wall outlet as well as the battery for backup power purposes.
Also picked up a portable pump. That was cheap enough and would work well in an emergency (aka all power is out and/or sump pump is broken). Thanks again @Mik , sincerely.
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UPDATE - Everything is installed and has passed tests.
See picture below.
- On the wall: Power Inverter (Pump Sentry)
- Lower left: Marine Battery (in a Snap-top vented battery box)
- Install sentry to wall
- Connect sentry to battery terminals (red/black cables)
- Don't kill yourself
- Place/close the battery box in desired location
- PLUG sump pump to sentry (the white/gray cables)
- PLUG sentry to wall (the black cable)
- Turn on
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Just don't mess with the wires right after you've fixed your terlet.
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Alright, probably a dumb question. The melting snow (and lots of rain today) has awoken the sump pump. It’s been going off frequently today, which is good.
However it’s going off every 2 minutes or so. Enough that I opened the pit cover and saw that it indeed goes off to remove a few inches of water but when it’s done, the water level rises back to the trigger point again, within 2 minutes.
Here’s the stupid question. I don’t see any water coming in through the drain pipes (you can see the two black pipes in the pic) so is there any other way water can seep into the pump well? I presume not and, if correct, imagine I need to repair the check valve so that water being discharged up the discharge pipe isn’t just cascading backwards into the well.