QA

How To Install Sewage Pump System

How big of a sewage pump do I need?

Q. What size sewage pump do I need? A home sewage pump must have the capacity to handle 2-inch solids. Beyond that, most homes need a ½-horsepower sewage pump that can pump about 5,000 gallons per hour to the height of the main sewage line or septic tank.

How do you install a septic pump?

How to Install a New Sewage Ejector Pump Step 1: Prepare the Basin. Step 2: Install New Check Valve. Step 3: Test the Pump and Float Switch. Step 4: Attach Adapter and Pump to Discharge Pipe. Step 5: Drill a Weep Hole. Step 6: Measure and Cut PVC Pipe. Step 7: Lower Sewage Pump Into Ejector Pit.

What type of pump is best for raw sewage?

Sewage Ejector Pumps A solid handling pump (also referred to as a sewage ejector pump) is made to pump raw sewage. This is a specialised pump because raw sewage usually contains too many raw materials for most pumps, so in instances where raw sewage is going to be pumped, then a solid handling pump is best used.

Can a sewage pump be installed outside?

Yes, just like any other pipe that is outdoors, the discharge lines from an external sump pump can freeze in frigid weather. Use a 4 inch discharge pipe and install it with a good enough slope so that water doesn’t sit in the pipe.

Do you need a check valve on a sewage pump?

If you do not have a Check Valve installed, it will cause your system to work much harder and more often to pump out the same amount. In Sewage systems, these valves are generally required by code to prevent sewage from draining back into the basin.

What’s the difference between a sump pump and a sewage pump?

What is the difference between a sump pump and a sewage pump? A. Sump pumps are used in basements to collect excess and unwanted water. Sewage pumps are used with bathrooms to force out both fluids and liquids to either a septic tank or other sewage system.

How far can a sewage pump push?

Sewage Grinder pumps normally have a 1-1/4” discharge and range from 2 HP and up. They will pump low volumes of sewage (30 Gallons Per Minute or less), but can push it over longer distances (thousands of feet) and can handle head pressures of up to 130 feet.

Do I need a grinder sewage pump?

A grinder pump is designed to aid homes that are located lower than the nearest municipal sewer line. The standard home is built higher than the sewer line so that gravity will draw wastewater from the sewage system. Not all homes are in this position, and for those homes, it’s necessary to have a grinder pump.

What kind of pump do I need for a septic tank?

Effluent pumps are typically used to pump grey-water from a septic tank to a leach field. For raw sewage, a sewage pump or grinder pump is recommended to prevent clogging from handling solids larger than 3/4″ in width.

Can you put a pump in a septic tank?

A septic pump is a type of submersible pump located in either the last chamber of the septic tank or a separate chamber outside the main tank. As waste fills the chamber, it triggers a float switch that turns on the septic pump. An impeller then pushes waste up the outflow pipe, into the drain field.

How do you tell if a septic pump is working?

To test if the pump is working, first turn the pump on by turning the second from the bottom float upside down. While holding that float upside down, turn the next float up (that would be the second from the top), upside down. You should hear the pump turn on.

How far can you pump sewage to a septic tank?

Sewage ejector pumps are designed to pump raw sewage from your home into a septic tank or gravity flow sewer main. For this reason, they can only pump to distances under 750 feet. However, a benefit of sewage ejector pumps is that they are built to move up to 200 gallons per minute of raw sewage.

What is difference between sewage pump and grinder pump?

Grinder pumps are a subtype of sewage pumps. Generally speaking, sewage pumps that are not grinder pumps can move sewage solids up to two inches in diameter that are easy to break down or dissolve. However, a general sewage pump that is not a grinder pump is usually less expensive and draws less power.

Is a sewage ejector pump the same as a grinder pump?

A sewage grinder pump is like an ejector pump on steroids. Like ejector pumps, they’re designed to process sewage. However, unlike ejector pumps, they also include grinding blades (hence the name) designed to grind sewage and other objects into slurry and slush before discharging it.

How often should sewage pump run?

Assuming your sump pump is in good normal operating condition, it should only run when the water level activates that float switch. Depending on your location, it’s not unusual for your pump to kick on two or three times a day.

How do you vent a sewage ejector pump?

The ejector tank should be vented by a connection to the top cover that’s at least 1 1/2 inches in diameter, although 2-inch vent pipe is common in this application. The tank vent should be a dry vent that either terminates at the exterior of the house or connects to another dry vent that terminates at the exterior.

Do sewage ejector pumps smell?

When property owners complain they have sewer gas smells by a sewage ejector or grinder in the basement or by their pump tank, you should take that complaint seriously. Hydrogen sulfide is dangerous even at low levels. Even if the smell comes and goes, it needs to be addressed.