• Polar
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    22 years ago

    Unless you’re showering in the basement, then your pump doesn’t work, and you’ll flood the basement as soon as you fill up the waste water tank.

    • @Kepabar@startrek.website
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      52 years ago

      That’s… what?

      In my home there aren’t any pumps.

      Water comes in, under pressure, from the city to my water outlets around the house.

      Waste water goes down a drain and out into the cities sewage system completely by gravity.

      • Polar
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        02 years ago

        How does gravity pump the water from a basement UP? Sump pumps are used.

        • @Kepabar@startrek.website
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          2 years ago

          I don’t have a basement.

          I have a crawlspace, the plumbing is all in the crawlspace.

          Water doesn’t need to be pumped up from the crawlspace because the lines are under pressure from the city main.

          Now, if the city water distribution system was down I wouldn’t have fresh water, but there are zero water pumps in my home.

          As for sewage, the sewer lines are below all my plumbing, so gravity is enough to drain them.

          • Polar
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            02 years ago

            Then the comment obviously doesn’t relate to you. I stated in the first comment about a basement.

            If you don’t have a basement, you can’t shower in your basement…

            • @sysadmin420@lemmy.world
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              52 years ago

              I live in the US, my sewer pipes are lower than the basement. No pumps are required where I live to shower or do laundry in the he basement.

            • FiveMacs
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              12 years ago

              I have a basement…I can and do shower in my basement. No weird pumps required and I can disconnect the house from the main and still have hot water.

              It’s specific to your area where this weird ass pump is required.

              • Polar
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                02 years ago

                I can also disconnect from the main and have hot water. Not sure what a water heater has anything to do with pumping the basement waste water out to the city/septic tank.

                It’s definitely not specific to my area. Septic tanks are common around the world, for example.

                • FiveMacs
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                  32 years ago

                  What are you even talking about anymore…the whole point was that atmospheric can be ran without power and still provide hot water.

                  Stop talking about waste water and pumps and septic. It has nothing to do with the conversation.

      • Aggy
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        02 years ago

        Does the hot water heater also use the pressure from the main line?

        • Shadow
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          52 years ago

          That’s how all hot water heaters work. His just uses natural gas instead of electricity.

      • Nougat
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        -12 years ago

        In a basement, the waste water is pumped up into the sewer drain. No electricity means that pump doesn’t work, the ejector pump pit fills up and floods the basement. If you have a shower in the basement, you likely also have a toilet in the basement, so when that pit floods, it’s “not a good time.”

        • @Kepabar@startrek.website
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          52 years ago

          That’s not how it works were I live.

          There are no pumps involved. Fresh water pipes are under pressure from the city water distribution system. Sewage pipes drain via gravity.

          There is never a reason to ‘pump’ sewage because the city sewage lines are below any sewage lines in my house.

        • Shadow
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          2 years ago

          This must be a regional thing. I’ve never heard of this. The sewers are still further down than my parents basement.

          So do you not have a toilet in the basement? Or do you have some of poop rated pump?

          If you don’t have a toilet, why have a shower?

          • Nougat
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            02 years ago

            Yes, it’s like a regular sump pump, except it’s got a large intake and a grinder.

            I can see where in older neighborhoods, more urban, where the sewer system existed before the residential, that sewer would still be lower than basements. Or maybe when the residential is much nearer to the water treatment facility, and it’s at the lower end of its slope to get there. New subdivisions on what used to be farmland, way away from water treatment, I’m sure they don’t dig the sewers as deep, and do ejector and sump pumps in the basements.