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#1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Eastern MA & Frye Island/Sebago Lake, Maine
Posts: 952
Thanks: 253
Thanked 351 Times in 158 Posts
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This is what I do....I made up a neat suction line out of 1 1/2" schedule 40 PVC. I incorporated some tees, 90's, and 45's at the very end so that it looks like a stand with a base and it holds the foot valve about 12" straight up off the bottom. It's very stable and I stay dry both putting it in and taking it out. It's about 30 feet long.
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" Live for today because yesterday is gone and tomorrow may never come" |
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#2 |
Senior Member
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Drawing the water out of the lake all year 'round....here's what I did....when I turn on the kitchen faucet, what comes out is Lake Winnipesaukee water with no filters what-so-ever. While I do not drink it, I do brush my teeth with it (in the bathroom). A 3-gal water container lug-a-jug carries treated town water for drinking, cooking and making coffee.
In 1992, I installed a 125' x 1 1/4" black poly tube that goes from the kitchen water pump-storage tank into the lake to a depth of about six feet. Pyrotenax Co ....now maybe renamed Tyco....purchased from Gilford Well sells the Pyrotenax heated waterlines....made in Ontario for use by farmers and others...to draw water from a lake all year round. Something like 888-watts, 220-volts, 3-amps are the specs for 125' ... controlled with a turn knob temperature thermostat powers up the heat wire inside the pvc tube to melt any build-up of slushy ice that clogs it up. Installation says to bury the tube just six inches down into the dirt, and run it through a two inch pvc tube where it crosses under the rocky embankment and down into the lake. Gilford Well charged me $1050. for the system which all came in one big box including the 125' black poly tube, internal heat cable, thermostat control and thermostat sensor....it did not include a foot valve. Supposedly, the black poly tube is a high pressure pvc that expands if a freeze-up occurs ...and unlike the hardware store black pvc that cracks when frozen....the high pressure pvc is still usable(?). One year, I forgot to turn on the circuit breaker till February or sometime.... and the pipe froze up....after turning the breaker on....it thawed out in two days and works just fine thereafter. Installed in 1992....and still works perfectly today...has needed no maintenance since 1992....did it myself....not too shabby.....budda-bing-bang-boom.....made in Ontario, Canada by Pyrotenax.
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... down and out, liv'n that Walmart side of the lake! Last edited by fatlazyless; 01-25-2015 at 08:22 AM. |
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