Ask Experts Questions for FREE Help !
Ask
    ambene's Avatar
    ambene Posts: 10, Reputation: 1
    New Member
     
    #1

    Dec 1, 2010, 11:52 AM
    High water flow to sump
    Bought a 30 yr old house that has a sump pump in the basement. I don't know what all exactly drains to the sump but I'm thinking maybe the gutters drain to the sump by way of the french drains (PVC pipes coming out of the ground @ grade to accept gutter discharge). During a hard rain our 1/2 hp sump pump has to operate every 6 seconds. We have a 17" sump and I calculated roughly 23 gpm of water entering the sump during the last rain. The sump pump discharge pipe goes to a storm sewer in my neighbors yard. During a heavy rain, this area will flood putting the discharge pipe under water and making the sump pump work even harder. Our sump pump is rated at 68 gpm @ 10' head. During the last rain, I calculated that the sump pump flowrate is only 33 gpm (probably mainly due to the flooding around the discharge pipe).

    Is it natural to have this much water entering the sump? Is my system setup typical? I do have a battery backup pump.

    Thanks
    speedball1's Avatar
    speedball1 Posts: 29,301, Reputation: 1939
    Eternal Plumber
     
    #2

    Dec 1, 2010, 12:43 PM

    During a heavy rain, this area will flood putting the discharge pipe under wate
    The very first thing I would do is would be tom install a check valve on the sump discharge line. Next I would trace the french drains to see if instead of dischanging into the sump pit it could be directed elsewhere. You
    Re correct! You're overloading the system and most of the rainwater runoff can be directed elsewhere. Say into a "do it yourself dry well" (see image) Good luck, Tom
    Attached Images
     
    ballengerb1's Avatar
    ballengerb1 Posts: 27,378, Reputation: 2280
    Home Repair & Remodeling Expert
     
    #3

    Dec 1, 2010, 12:50 PM

    It would be very rare for gutters to drain into a sump pump in the basement. Makes no sense to me at all. Why take water that's is already outside, bring it inside only to pump it back outside. Nearly all sumps that pump outside are pumping foundation water that is trying to seep into your basement. You may have a high water table or just poor grading, only one of these can be fixed so try regarding. You also should try to direct your sump discharge to an area that is not under water.
    ambene's Avatar
    ambene Posts: 10, Reputation: 1
    New Member
     
    #4

    Dec 2, 2010, 09:43 AM
    Tom, I do have a check valve installed in the discharge line and have verified that it works. I'm not sure how to trace the french drains, the water enters the sump via slits in the side. I like the idea of that drain well, I'll have to verify if the gutters in fact do drain to the sump.

    Ballenger, I don't have many options for discharge of the sump unfortunately. Regrading is probably the best solution but not possible for me right now.

    Thanks for the info guys!

Not your question? Ask your question View similar questions

 

Question Tools Search this Question
Search this Question:

Advanced Search

Add your answer here.


Check out some similar questions!

My sump pump won't turn off after it has pumped the water out of the sump pit [ 2 Answers ]

My sump pump is only 3 years old and it won't stop running after it has pumped the water out of the sump pit. What do I do to fix this? Is there a switch that I have to adjust? Please help.

Water won't go down in sump pump hole? [ 3 Answers ]

We recently had a really bad storm which flooded half the city. When I went downstaires, water was coming out of our sump pump hole and flooding the basement, only a inch and then it stopped. Since we don't have a pump we took pails and dipped the water out, and stopped after a while, (we took half...

How many holes should the basin of the ejector sump and how many for the sump pump? [ 3 Answers ]

I have two different wells, one holds my ejector pump and the other one holds the sump pump. I recently was getting water in my sub basement and it was coming from between the basin w/ejector pump and the concrete. Once we drilled a hole in the basin the water drains from the concrete into the...

No water in sump punp [ 3 Answers ]

My sump pump doesn't get any water in it, even when it rains. While part of me says, "Great, I don't have to worry about my basement flooding if the lights go out, etc." I'm sure something must be wrong when no water is coming in. What do I do to see what is wrong, or should I not worry about it?

Basement water / sump pump [ 1 Answers ]

We have water coming into our basement when it rains. Until recently, the water flowed into a drain in a recessed area of the basement and did not cause many problems except for a wet floor. Recently we ran a new drain line from the house to the city main which bypasses the drain in the basement....


View more questions Search