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house is 9 years old, has full basement but no toilet or bathroom in basement. ejector pit (located in the center of basement near furnace and hot water tank) fills with water periodically but i do not know where this water comes from. sump pump operates individually in its own pit in the corner of the basement. pump in ejector pit runs constantly as the float is stuck and i suspect a faulty switch. how difficult to replace

2006-10-22 14:08:55 · 3 answers · asked by target 1 in Home & Garden Maintenance & Repairs

3 answers

Sumps for rain water. Ejector's for sewage.

They are not hard to replace at all. See if there's a cord pugged into the back of another cord

In many cases, the pump (the top plug) plugs into the floatswitch (the bottom or first plug). If that's the case, you just need to replace the float switch which is maybe $40.

If that's no the setup, you're going to have to replace the whole pump. It's also easy once you get the cover off of the hole.

It'll probably be clamped to the pipe with a piece of something flexible in between. Or, the pipe could screw in.

Anyway. remove the old pump and get one about the same size (it's nice if the height of where the pipe connects is about the same the same). I wouldn't get a very big or expensive one for no more water than you have.

Don't know where your little bit of water coming from (no washer down there?). If you have a humidifer on your furnace that could be it. Since that's just plain water anyway - it could be sent to the sump pump instead...

2006-10-22 14:34:44 · answer #1 · answered by Jon W 5 · 1 0

A sump pump is a pump used to remove water that has accumulated in a sump pit. A sump pit, commonly found in the home basement, is simply a hole to collect water. The water may enter via the perimeter drains of a basement waterproofing system, funneling into the pit, or may arrive because of rain or because of natural ground water, if the basement is below the water table level. Plumbing drainage and venting systems maintain neutral air pressure in the drains, allowing flow of water and sewage down drains and through waste pipes by gravity. As such, it is critical that a downward slope be maintained throughout. In relatively rare situations, a downward slope out of a building to the sewer cannot be created, and a special collection pit and grinding lift 'sewage ejector' pump are needed.

2016-05-21 23:40:41 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

TEXAS - BASEMENT IN ATTIC!

2006-10-22 14:13:58 · answer #3 · answered by Bonno 6 · 0 0

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