I don't understand all of these over-engineered ways of using the reject water. If your auto pumping plant is in the eq. room it should be as simple as buying a tank and setting it up on blocks to get it above the pump inlet. When I did it on my old Mark VII Rotoclean it cost me the price of a tank and a couple of hours for a plumber. Here is what I did,
Elevated a 300 gallon tank next to the pumping plant.
Disconnected the fill from the original tank and routed it to the manhole of the new tank.
Moved the fill and low level switches to the new tank, putting the low level switch a couple inches higher than the outlet fitting, the fill switch about a foot higher. Disregard the fill switch reference if you will be using a float valve. This leaves room for about 200-250 gallons of reject water to be dumped on top of the water already in the tank.
Plumb the outlet of the new tank to the HP pump.
You're done!
Everyone seems to be hung up on using the existing supply tank which just complicates the $h!+ out of it. Ignore the old tank and life will be much easier...been there, done that.
I don't understand all of these over-engineered ways of using the reject water. If your auto pumping plant is in the eq. room it should be as simple as buying a tank and setting it up on blocks to get it above the pump inlet. When I did it on my old Mark VII Rotoclean it cost me the price of a tank and a couple of hours for a plumber. Here is what I did,
Elevated a 300 gallon tank next to the pumping plant.
Disconnected the fill from the original tank and routed it to the manhole of the new tank.
Moved the fill and low level switches to the new tank, putting the low level switch a couple inches higher than the outlet fitting, the fill switch about a foot higher. Disregard the fill switch reference if you will be using a float valve. This leaves room for about 200-250 gallons of reject water to be dumped on top of the water already in the tank.
Plumb the outlet of the new tank to the HP pump.
You're done!
Everyone seems to be hung up on using the existing supply tank which just complicates the $h!+ out of it. Ignore the old tank and life will be much easier...been there, done that.
For that type of "spell check," you'd need to write in Microsoft Word that can also check grammar. You spelled "know" and "since" correctly, and a simple spell-check wouldn't have caught it.
My preference is to use a storage tank and pressurize the water to a second float valve in the automatic tank that's higher than the one on city water. You'd only need a pump with bladder storage, a tank, a float valve and a low-water cutoff switch that will disable the pump if the tank is empty. You'd want an overflow on the storage tank so if the pump fails it won't make a mess.
With a bladder tank you'd use the same type of float valve you're already using. Harbor Freight has a bladder tank and stainless steel pump assembly for $99 that you just plumb in and out and plug in. The float switches you can get almost anywhere - the one I like is a blue and yellow one that has contacts for both close on rise and close on drop. We used to get them from Specialty Equipment.