I saw an aeration tank being run from a Pontiac Firebird
AIR pump on a belt drive from a fractional-horse motor.
Worked fine, gave good aeration, and was not an overpriced
proprietary unit.
Joe Bobst wrote in message
...
I am looking at purchasing a house with a non-working Oldham septic
tank
in Southwest Ohio
The common sense business approach to this problem is to have a
professional
appraiser (preferably one your bank knows) come up with a dollar figure
for the
house. Assume that the septic system is history and get a firm estimate
for
replacement. Give this figure to your appraiser. The price will now be
something realistically close to the absolute top the bank can expect.
Subtract
the appraisal cost. Now subtract roughly 5% from this figure for all the
aggravation and make that your firm offer to the bank. Don't budge for any
reason whatsoever.
Remember that a crippled septic system in a repo house is likely to be
only one
of all the possible problems with the dwelling. In the automotive world,
when
people stop paying on their cars, the vehicle will be wholesaled by any
dealer
because they know from bitter experience that it is now a hurt asset. The
bank
wants to recover as much of the foreclosed mortgage as they can, of
course, so
if you lay all your cards on the table and they say no, just wait a while.
Odds
are thay can't unload it and it will be yours. Good luck.
Joe
Joe
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