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What to Consider when Installing a Rainwater Harvesting System



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By : Marcus Bicknell    29 or more times read
Submitted 2009-12-09 12:55:02

It may be hard to believe that England has a water shortage and there is now official encouragement to use less mains water both by increasing the use of rainwater and using water-efficient appliances. There have been DEFRA adverts in national newspapers telling us to save water. However, at the moment, there are no tax incentives or grants available for the homeowner to consider installing a rainwater harvesting system. It may interest you to know that building regulations are changing in 2010 to make a 120 litre maximum per person per day the norm and planners may find that they need rainwater harvesting.

Here are 10 key points to be considered when installing a system.

1. Bury the tank underground: the 10 degrees Celsius cool of the ground inhibits bacterial action and the water does not go yellow.

2. Your rainwater system should be planned early: with the architect, you must check the inverts, which are the levels of the tank and drain/soakaway and rain pipes. Also the tank should be buried when the first part of the groundworks are being dug.

3. Choose a supplier which provides an accurate tank size calculation and a written quote conform with BS8515 2009: you want to be certain to have the trouble-free equipment which will get the approval of your council inspector.

4. If you are not on the main drain, dig a double size soakaway for tank overflow and debris: the filter in the head of the tank is self-cleaning. Water flowing over it sends debris out through siphon to drain or soakaway. No maintenance.

5. Equip the submersible pump with a floating intake. Why? Because it skims the freshest and cleanest water from just below the surface of the water.

6. Make sure that the submersible pump has a float switch: even if the pump has dry run protection, there is a risk that it would burn itself out when the tank empties repeatedly in summer. Your mains top up (if it's the sort that admits mains water into the rain tank) should also prevent dry running but the flow might be slower than the pump can shift.

7. Concrete the tank in if you have ground water within 100 cms of the surface: otherwise when it's empty its buoyancy will float the whole tank out of the ground.

8. Ensure that all the downpipes off the house are connected to the tank: get all the possible water off the roof when it rains.

9. Do not run surface water into the rainwater tank: you'll want to avoid oil spills and dog mess getting into the water if you're flushing toilets and washing clothes with it.

10. A smart header tank with your rain system should be considered: it reduces electricity use by ten, reduces wear and tear on the pump and appliances (gentle gravity feed) and ensures water supply in a power cut. However, do not fit a standard header tank as, in the heat of the roof space, the rainwater will turn yellow through bacterial action when you go away on holiday.

That's it in a nutshell. It's not terribly difficult to fit a rainwater harvesting system. For an average investment of #2000 to #3000, to make a sustainable difference this is the simplest and least expensive of the many green options you can take.


Author Resource:

Rainwater Harvesting Limited supplies rain water harvesting storage tanks, pumps, filters and management systems to households and commercial businesses. RainWaterHarvesting.co.uk is a large information resource offering valuable technical information and advice in addition to 1000s of product specifications. Download the invaluable rainwater harvesting tank size calculator

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