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#1
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All,
When testing my battery powered backup sump pump a few weeks ago, I noticed it wasn't pumping any water (it was making noise like it was trying to). I disconnected and then re-connected the pipe and it seemed to start working again. Now a few weeks later, I checked it and had the same problem, and again it was resolved by disconnecting and re-connecting the pipe. The battery is only a couple years old and the water levels look fine. Any idea what could be going on? Thanks, Dan |
#2
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On Jan 3, 12:08*pm, wrote:
All, When testing my battery powered backup sump pump a few weeks ago, I noticed it wasn't pumping any water (it was making noise like it was trying to). *I disconnected and then re-connected the pipe and it seemed to start working again. *Now a few weeks later, I checked it and had the same problem, and again it was resolved by disconnecting and re-connecting the pipe. The battery is only a couple years old and the water levels look fine. Any idea what could be going on? Thanks, Dan What is battery voltage |
#3
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On Jan 3, 1:59*pm, ransley wrote:
On Jan 3, 12:08*pm, wrote: All, When testing my battery powered backup sump pump a few weeks ago, I noticed it wasn't pumping any water (it was making noise like it was trying to). *I disconnected and then re-connected the pipe and it seemed to start working again. *Now a few weeks later, I checked it and had the same problem, and again it was resolved by disconnecting and re-connecting the pipe. The battery is only a couple years old and the water levels look fine. Any idea what could be going on? Thanks, Dan What is battery voltage 12V |
#4
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On Jan 3, 2:01*pm, wrote:
On Jan 3, 1:59*pm, ransley wrote: On Jan 3, 12:08*pm, wrote: All, When testing my battery powered backup sump pump a few weeks ago, I noticed it wasn't pumping any water (it was making noise like it was trying to). *I disconnected and then re-connected the pipe and it seemed to start working again. *Now a few weeks later, I checked it and had the same problem, and again it was resolved by disconnecting and re-connecting the pipe. The battery is only a couple years old and the water levels look fine.. Any idea what could be going on? Thanks, Dan What is battery voltage 12V- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - 12v is 25% charged or 75% dead. |
#5
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On Jan 3, 2:18*pm, ransley wrote:
On Jan 3, 2:01*pm, wrote: On Jan 3, 1:59*pm, ransley wrote: On Jan 3, 12:08*pm, wrote: All, When testing my battery powered backup sump pump a few weeks ago, I noticed it wasn't pumping any water (it was making noise like it was trying to). *I disconnected and then re-connected the pipe and it seemed to start working again. *Now a few weeks later, I checked it and had the same problem, and again it was resolved by disconnecting and re-connecting the pipe. The battery is only a couple years old and the water levels look fine. Any idea what could be going on? Thanks, Dan What is battery voltage 12V- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - 12v is 25% charged or 75% dead. Sorry.. I thought you meant what kind of battery.. I'm not sure of the actual voltage.. My multimeter isn't working |
#6
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#7
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#8
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On Jan 3, 2:57*pm, Erma1ina wrote:
wrote: All, When testing my battery powered backup sump pump a few weeks ago, I noticed it wasn't pumping any water (it was making noise like it was trying to). *I disconnected and then re-connected the pipe and it seemed to start working again. *Now a few weeks later, I checked it and had the same problem, and again it was resolved by disconnecting and re-connecting the pipe. The battery is only a couple years old and the water levels look fine. Any idea what could be going on? Thanks, Dan Air lock? Is there a little hole (1/8+ inch diameter and unclogged) in the discharge pipe below the checkvalve? I looked and didn't see any holes. I should also mention there appears to be two check valves installed in the line.. One right before the connection to the pump and one at the 90 degree turn in the pipe toward the wall. Does the hole need to be above the water line? If so it may not be possible if it has to be below the first check valve. |
#9
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On Jan 3, 3:31*pm, wrote:
On Jan 3, 2:57*pm, Erma1ina wrote: wrote: All, When testing my battery powered backup sump pump a few weeks ago, I noticed it wasn't pumping any water (it was making noise like it was trying to). *I disconnected and then re-connected the pipe and it seemed to start working again. *Now a few weeks later, I checked it and had the same problem, and again it was resolved by disconnecting and re-connecting the pipe. The battery is only a couple years old and the water levels look fine.. Any idea what could be going on? Thanks, Dan Air lock? Is there a little hole (1/8+ inch diameter and unclogged) in the discharge pipe below the checkvalve? I looked and didn't see any holes. *I should also mention there appears to be two check valves installed in the line.. One right before the connection to the pump and one at the 90 degree turn in the pipe toward the wall. *Does the hole need to be above the water line? If so it may not be possible if it has to be below the first check valve.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Two check valves ??? Where do the two output lines from the main and standby pumps come together, or are they completely separate, pls describe the situation in a little more detail. |
#10
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On Jan 3, 5:53*pm, "hr(bob) "
wrote: On Jan 3, 3:31*pm, wrote: On Jan 3, 2:57*pm, Erma1ina wrote: wrote: All, When testing my battery powered backup sump pump a few weeks ago, I noticed it wasn't pumping any water (it was making noise like it was trying to). *I disconnected and then re-connected the pipe and it seemed to start working again. *Now a few weeks later, I checked it and had the same problem, and again it was resolved by disconnecting and re-connecting the pipe. The battery is only a couple years old and the water levels look fine. Any idea what could be going on? Thanks, Dan Air lock? Is there a little hole (1/8+ inch diameter and unclogged) in the discharge pipe below the checkvalve? I looked and didn't see any holes. *I should also mention there appears to be two check valves installed in the line.. One right before the connection to the pump and one at the 90 degree turn in the pipe toward the wall. *Does the hole need to be above the water line? If so it may not be possible if it has to be below the first check valve.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Two check valves ??? *Where do the two output lines from the main and standby pumps come together, or are they completely separate, pls describe the situation in a little more detail. separate pipes for the main and backup. |
#12
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On Jan 3, 9:22�pm, Erma1ina wrote:
wrote: On Jan 3, 2:57 pm, Erma1ina wrote: wrote: All, When testing my battery powered backup sump pump a few weeks ago, I noticed it wasn't pumping any water (it was making noise like it was trying to). �I disconnected and then re-connected the pipe and it seemed to start working again. �Now a few weeks later, I checked it and had the same problem, and again it was resolved by disconnecting and re-connecting the pipe. The battery is only a couple years old and the water levels look fine. Any idea what could be going on? Thanks, Dan Air lock? Is there a little hole (1/8+ inch diameter and unclogged) in the discharge pipe below the checkvalve? I looked and didn't see any holes. �I should also mention there appears to be two check valves installed in the line.. One right before the connection to the pump and one at the 90 degree turn in the pipe toward the wall. �Does the hole need to be above the water line? If so it may not be possible if it has to be below the first check valve. Apparently some pumps have an anti-airlock hole built-in. If you can, check your owner's manual to see if yours does and where it's located. If you don't have that manual available, check around where the main pump housing fits into the base for a vent/relief hole. If you find one, be sure it's not plugged up. From what I've read, that's a problem with the built in anti-airlock vents -- being near the base of the pump, closer to the bottom of the sump pit, they're more likely to be plugged with dirt and debris than if they're higher up in the discharge pipe. But in any case they need to be between the pump discharge and the check valve, though not necessarily above the water, though, again, if not above the water they are more prone to clogging up and also more difficult to check. My sump pump (Wayne CDU790) does not have a built in anti-airlock vent. The check valve is on the discharge line above the sump pit and the anti-airlock hole is about a foot or so below the top of the sump pit so it sprays onto the sump wall when the pump is running. Even there, it does get a bit of dirt build up over time so I clean it out yearly with a nail. Here's as good an explanation of the sump pump "air lock" issue as I've found: http://www.selfhelpforums.com/showpo...24&postcount=6 "Envision the sump pump drawing down and sucking air before the pump switch deactivates. Now you have a small pocket of air around the impeller and nothing leading to the bottom side of the check valve. The impeller does not have the force to move air, only water. That 3/16" [anti-airlock vent] guarantees that water will enter into that chamber where the impeller is so that the pump can force the check valve open. Doesn't matter where that check valve is; those pumps are not designed to move air.......only water. Even if the check valve was 8 feet up.......that air hole will allow that huge pocket of air to displace quickly enough to engage water to push up to open the check. It's not rocket science but I've seen too many pump failures that did hundreds of thousands of dollars of damage and I can go right to the pump, take it out of the pit and start it right up like there is nothing wrong with it. And there isn't; the pump air-locked and had nothing to do with product, had everything to do with workmanship error."- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - if theres any chance to run a sump overfull gravity drain to daylight, thats idea. like a home that sits a little high above street level |
#13
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On Jan 3, 12:08*pm, wrote:
All, When testing my battery powered backup sump pump a few weeks ago, I noticed it wasn't pumping any water (it was making noise like it was trying to). *I disconnected and then re-connected the pipe and it seemed to start working again. *Now a few weeks later, I checked it and had the same problem, and again it was resolved by disconnecting and re-connecting the pipe. The battery is only a couple years old and the water levels look fine. Any idea what could be going on? Thanks, Dan I would not trust those chargers without knowing it keeps a proper voltage be testing it, I would think a properly charged battery should last 20 + years. Unless the battery is kept at a minimum of 12.8 it will sulfate and be ruined in a year. www.batteryuniversity.com has all sorts of battery info, that could be the real issue a weak sulfated battery. |
#14
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On Jan 3, 6:52�pm, ransley wrote:
On Jan 3, 12:08�pm, wrote: All, When testing my battery powered backup sump pump a few weeks ago, I noticed it wasn't pumping any water (it was making noise like it was trying to). �I disconnected and then re-connected the pipe and it seemed to start working again. �Now a few weeks later, I checked it and had the same problem, and again it was resolved by disconnecting and re-connecting the pipe. The battery is only a couple years old and the water levels look fine. Any idea what could be going on? Thanks, Dan I would not trust those chargers without knowing it keeps a proper voltage be testing it, I would think a properly charged battery should last 20 + years. Unless the battery is kept at a minimum of 12.8 it will sulfate and be ruined in a year.www.batteryuniversity.comhas all sorts of battery info, that could be the real issue a weak sulfated battery. lead acid batteries have short lives, after a few years their capacity drops a lot. 20 years? you are dreaming ![]() |
#15
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On Jan 3, 8:03*pm, " wrote:
On Jan 3, 6:52 pm, ransley wrote: On Jan 3, 12:08 pm, wrote: All, When testing my battery powered backup sump pump a few weeks ago, I noticed it wasn't pumping any water (it was making noise like it was trying to). I disconnected and then re-connected the pipe and it seemed to start working again. Now a few weeks later, I checked it and had the same problem, and again it was resolved by disconnecting and re-connecting the pipe. The battery is only a couple years old and the water levels look fine.. Any idea what could be going on? Thanks, Dan I would not trust those chargers without knowing it keeps a proper voltage be testing it, I would think a properly charged battery should last 20 + years. Unless the battery is kept at a minimum of 12.8 it will sulfate and be ruined in a year.www.batteryuniversity.comhas all sorts of battery info, that could be the real issue a weak sulfated battery. lead acid batteries have short lives, after a few years their capacity drops a lot. 20 years? you are dreaming ![]() - Show quoted text - You are kidding, its basicly unused, no discharging just maintenance charge, no vibration as you get in a car that destroys plates. Low voltage kills them in a 6 months. He replaced one after 1.5 years, that simple fact tells me its a charger issue. On solar instalations you get better life than cars, vibration is a factor you have not considered. |
#16
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On Sat, 3 Jan 2009 15:52:19 -0800 (PST), ransley
wrote: On Jan 3, 12:08Â*pm, wrote: All, When testing my battery powered backup sump pump a few weeks ago, I noticed it wasn't pumping any water (it was making noise like it was trying to). Â*I disconnected and then re-connected the pipe and it seemed to start working again. Â*Now a few weeks later, I checked it and had the same problem, and again it was resolved by disconnecting and re-connecting the pipe. The battery is only a couple years old and the water levels look fine. Any idea what could be going on? Thanks, Dan I would not trust those chargers without knowing it keeps a proper voltage be testing it, I would think a properly charged battery should last 20 + years. Unless the battery is kept at a minimum of 12.8 it will sulfate and be ruined in a year. www.batteryuniversity.com has all sorts of battery info, that could be the real issue a weak sulfated battery. Except a weak battery would not pump after burping the line either. I vote for a priming problem. |
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