I have a pre-packaged lift station that I specified a couple years ago that the owner is having problems with. The system serves a day care that has about 100 kids and 15 employees. It pumps into a gravity manhole about 300 feet away. Everything worked fine for the first year and then two months ago the alarm started going off constantly one night. The owner called the installing plumber and it sounds like he didn't actually do any trouble shooting he just reset the alarm and charged her for the service call. His statement was "There's nothing I can do. It's too small and I told the engineer it was too small when we put it in." So she called me.
Now, I don't have the plans handy, because they were done when I was with a previous company and weren't a set that I kept, but I will get them next week. I'm not normally one to dismiss concerns from an installer, but I do remember the plumber calling me to say that it was too small but when I asked for his reasoning as to why it was too small he didn't have anything other than it just seems smaller than the ones I normally do. So I took him through all my calculations and he didn't have anything more concrete to say.
The code in my area requires a basis of 20 gallons per day per person and a peak factor of 4. I based my calculations off that and it comes out to a little over 6 gallons per minute, which is what I designed the station for. I do you remember that it has 2 Zoeller grinder pumps in it and that they were well more than adequate for that flow rate.
My thought is that if it were actually too small it wouldn't have operated just fine for over a year, and it wouldn't have initially failed at night when no one was using the facility. The main things that I can think of going wrong are a stuck or failed high water alarm switch, one of the pumps has failed, or there is a wiring problem and the panel just thinks that one of the pumps has failed. The system has continued to work fine and not back up for the last 2 months even though the alarm has been tripped and continues to trip every time it's reset. My question is, is there a way to test which of these is the problem? I think I could observe the station run through multiple cycles and if both pumps switch on then it points to a problem with the high water alarm. But if only pump kicks on then it points to a problem with the pump. I'm not sure in a duplex system if I will be able to tell which pump is kicking on and is there an easy way to tell if the problem is with the pump or the pump circuitry? I wish I could give more information about the panel itself, but they called me late Thursday afternoon so I haven't had a chance to be on site.
Are there any other likely problems that I have overlooked?
Thanks.
Now, I don't have the plans handy, because they were done when I was with a previous company and weren't a set that I kept, but I will get them next week. I'm not normally one to dismiss concerns from an installer, but I do remember the plumber calling me to say that it was too small but when I asked for his reasoning as to why it was too small he didn't have anything other than it just seems smaller than the ones I normally do. So I took him through all my calculations and he didn't have anything more concrete to say.
The code in my area requires a basis of 20 gallons per day per person and a peak factor of 4. I based my calculations off that and it comes out to a little over 6 gallons per minute, which is what I designed the station for. I do you remember that it has 2 Zoeller grinder pumps in it and that they were well more than adequate for that flow rate.
My thought is that if it were actually too small it wouldn't have operated just fine for over a year, and it wouldn't have initially failed at night when no one was using the facility. The main things that I can think of going wrong are a stuck or failed high water alarm switch, one of the pumps has failed, or there is a wiring problem and the panel just thinks that one of the pumps has failed. The system has continued to work fine and not back up for the last 2 months even though the alarm has been tripped and continues to trip every time it's reset. My question is, is there a way to test which of these is the problem? I think I could observe the station run through multiple cycles and if both pumps switch on then it points to a problem with the high water alarm. But if only pump kicks on then it points to a problem with the pump. I'm not sure in a duplex system if I will be able to tell which pump is kicking on and is there an easy way to tell if the problem is with the pump or the pump circuitry? I wish I could give more information about the panel itself, but they called me late Thursday afternoon so I haven't had a chance to be on site.
Are there any other likely problems that I have overlooked?
Thanks.