I have never talked to anyone who has had one fail. Have you?
[/quote]I used what George is using for a while. Its a disaster waiting to happen. Even if the pump only pumps 10 gal an hour its going to happen. I know, I happened to me twice. This is why I use the Liter meter. You can set it to pump just a little more then the amount you evap everyday. Then if my two float switches fail it will take a week for my sump to flood.
cwa46":212u758a said:These posts on top-off systems always end up with everyone talking about what system has the least risk of flooding. Nobody knows and nobody even asks if anybody has had failures or flooding. If so, what was the setup?
I think the most simple solution is the best. (Float valve in sump), and I have never talked to anyone who has had one fail. Have you?
Also, if you hook a float valve up to an RO unit. How does it shut off the RO unit. I know these float valve are used with gravity feed top-off tanks but how do you shut off the solinoid that will shut off the waste water. You just can't hook a float valve up to RO system, turn on the system and let it run. The good water will be stopped by the float valve but the waste water will just keep running. It must have some kind of switch connected to the float...Naw, then it would be a float switch.
Ernie
My Kent Ro/Di unit feeds directly my float switch in my 5 g top off reservoir. I had my system installed by LFS He ordered a shutoff solenoid from Kent that will shut off the waiste water when not refilling. Any leaks though will make the system malfunction & continue to waste water. I have not relied on it fully BUT it does work.