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[email protected] January 21st 05 07:19 PM

Wholehouse humidifier drain backup problem
 
I have 2 wholehouse humidifiers attached to the furnaces. The excess
water is drained out through a 1/2" tube. The tube outside the house is
about 2 feet long. No problems for 4 years.
Yesterday I noticed water in the basement. Upon investigation, found
about 1/4" water around water heater and furnace. My first thought was
that the water heater broke (6 years old). Then I saw water dripping
from under the drain pump attached to the furnace. Went outside and
found that the tube coming out of the house was filled with ice
crystals.
What probably happened is that the drain water backed up over several
days and overflowed out of the pump. For now I unplugged the pump,
turned off the humidifiers and cleaned up. (the carpet outside the util
room is wet, so need to do more drying :-()

Anyway, why did the drain water in the tube freeze now? 1st time in 4
years.
Also, how to avoid this? Someone suggested I keep the drain tube coming
out of the house very short (maybe 6 in). But in freezing cold the
dripping water could still freeze and lead to water backup. Any ideas?
Thanks.
Mark Sabatini


Speedy Jim January 21st 05 07:33 PM

wrote:
I have 2 wholehouse humidifiers attached to the furnaces. The excess
water is drained out through a 1/2" tube. The tube outside the house is
about 2 feet long. No problems for 4 years.
Yesterday I noticed water in the basement. Upon investigation, found
about 1/4" water around water heater and furnace. My first thought was
that the water heater broke (6 years old). Then I saw water dripping
from under the drain pump attached to the furnace. Went outside and
found that the tube coming out of the house was filled with ice
crystals.
What probably happened is that the drain water backed up over several
days and overflowed out of the pump. For now I unplugged the pump,
turned off the humidifiers and cleaned up. (the carpet outside the util
room is wet, so need to do more drying :-()

Anyway, why did the drain water in the tube freeze now? 1st time in 4
years.
Also, how to avoid this? Someone suggested I keep the drain tube coming
out of the house very short (maybe 6 in). But in freezing cold the
dripping water could still freeze and lead to water backup. Any ideas?
Thanks.
Mark Sabatini


A shorter hose will retain more heat from the house and be less
likely to freeze. But if it gets *real* cold out there, it'll
still freeze.

Electrically heat the hose?

Pump the water to a laundry tub or floor drain *inside*?

Many of those little condensate pumps have provision for
an "ALARM" function. This can either trigger an audible
alarm or shut down equipment. In your case it may be simpler
to have it switch off the humidifiers. Anyway, something like
this is another option.

Jim

John A. Weeks III January 22nd 05 01:09 AM

In article , Speedy Jim
wrote:

Anyway, why did the drain water in the tube freeze now?


It got really cold?

Pump the water to a laundry tub or floor drain *inside*?


That is how I always see it...the discharge tube runs to
the floor drain. You could also use a sink, sump-pump
basket, or drain it into a 5-gallon bucket & dump the
bucket from time to time.

-john-

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John A. Weeks III 952-432-2708
Newave Communications
http://www.johnweeks.com
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