[AT] Tractor Shop Question
Billy Hood
aggie1967 at msn.com
Fri Oct 15 13:26:55 PDT 2004
As a licensened On Site Sewage System installer in Texas I am supposed to tell you that is a no no--but I will not. You could use such a system in a majority of counties legally here if you own more than 15 acres.
But I have installed systems similar to yours several times. If in doubt install one settling tank (barrel) and two perforated tanks arranged in a triangle with the primary tank feeding the secondaries. I put this exact system at my shop in West Texas and figured if it did not work, I could add some leach/field lines later. This shop had lav, toilet and urinal, as well as a laundry sink in the shop itself. My shop was the gathering place for my son's mud dragging buddies and I could not keep brown pop in the fridge for my friends, so it got lots of use. I really like the urinal as it uses lots less water per flush than a toilet. We often use plastic barrels to use as a pump tank when a toilet is below the grade of existing septic system--just drop a chopper pump with float control in it. For a licensed inspected system, I have to put a warning alarm and float on such a tank. For commercial systems we have to put in two pumps on a rotary relay and alarm lights. Big Brother gets into our business more and more. It now costs me more than $500/ year to keep my license and 8 hours of continuing education--this is before bond and insurance costs. We mainly do commercial and do contract maintenance on a large satellite system for a school system--all headaches.
Bear
----- Original Message -----
From: Warren F. Smith<mailto:WarrenSmith at palmettobuilders.net>
To: 'Antique tractor email discussion group'<mailto:at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Friday, October 15, 2004 2:16 PM
Subject: RE: [AT] Tractor Shop Question
I'm not in the city limits, and I take most of my "business" outside, but
there are times when you can't make it the 400' to the house, or it's
raining, sleeting, etc.
I may look for a little larger tank for the primary, then use the perforated
drum buried in the leach pit instead of digging all the laterals. I thought
it would work, but you know, if it didn't, digging it out would stink!
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