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#12 (permalink) |
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Super Member
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Tyler, Texas
Posts: 7,809
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Mike,
I was just thinking something similar to your idea of building a wall around the tank. I don't know if you need a bottom cement pad. I was thinking round gravel for drainage. For the walls, I was thinking retaining wall blocks. Three foot is well within the range of a do it yourselfer. If I remeber correctly, you can go 4 feet without any engineering. What is the price difference between the two? If it's a couple grand, then digging makes allot of sense. If it's less then the cost of the block and time to dig the hole, then get the ribbed one and bury it all the way. Eddie
__________________
My Goals for 2008 1. Fishing and Hunting with my kids. 2. Build my storage Shed. 3. Put my outside access bathroom together. 4. Fence in a quarter acre for Turkeys. 5. Build my gazebo for my front pasture. 6. Finish back pasture and plant it in Bermuda. 7. Start my food plots. 8. Build a comfortable deer stand for two. 9. Build a wood burning fireplace in my home. 10. New flooring in my home. 11. Build a pasture sprayer. 12. Get my old jeep running. |
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#13 (permalink) |
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Gold Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Renton, Washington
Posts: 349
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Why not disguise the above ground tank inside of a Silo or shed? You could dig out a hole to lower the height from your gutters. Then have your silo or whatever just go from the ground level up to the top of what ever size tank you use.
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1st Peter 6-9 |
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#14 (permalink) |
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Silver Member
Join Date: May 2007
Location: West Coast of Arizona
Posts: 152
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Here in the Desert Southwest we use alot of water tanks above and below ground depending on how "Deep your pockets are". They are used for drinking water storage, either because of a low producing well, or being in and area where wells are cost prohibitive. I have installed underground tanks at several homes I have built in the area. Around here you can expect to pay about a buck a gallon for a underground, and about half that for above ground.
I have a client that wants me to use an above ground and raise it on a platform with vertical siding and a tin roof to look like a "Pettycoat Junction" water tower.
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YANMAR FX42d, Koyker 155 FEL, ROPS w/Canapy, Top & Tilt Gearmore BS w/ Hydraulic Scarfiers. Loaded R4 Industrial Tires, Princess Auto BH w/ Subframe. Boom pole. Pallet Forks. |
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#15 (permalink) |
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Gold Member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Northeast Ohio
Posts: 353
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I have been looking at this for the barn I am now building also--not for home use. Up here I really need to bury because of the winters though. I was thinking of pouring concrete around it after set in the ground. I am just using the water for equipment cleaning, hand washing, etc. I don't need to have potable or large volumes. And slightly used AG tank are cehap and available locally (auctions, etc).
A couple of numbers I have been finding since searching the net recently. You can collect about 0.6 gallons per square foot of roof per inch of rain. Remember that the "square foot" is the building footprint--i.e a 12/12 pitch collects the same as a 4/12 pitch. Many sites say expect about 80% of that for real world numbers (losses from spill over, and most "dump" the first few minutes rain to avoid the dirt/guano/etc off the roof). The US Gov also says we humans use 80-100 gallons per day! Most is toilet use, then showers. So for a large family home you need a LOT larger tank(s) than for a barn with occasional use. Don't know if that was useful...but I found it interesting as I have been looking into this recently too. There are also a lot of "diverters" available to keep the collected water cleaner. Seems like a lot of equipment is Australlian made or designed. Hope any of this was helpful...good luck and add pics when you start. Peter |
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#16 (permalink) |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Angleton & Bastrop & Paige Texas
Posts: 1,546
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Eddie -- like Gambler said - an underground runs about a buck a gallon .... $10,000 ... 10,000 gallon above ground is $3400 ....(5,000G tank for $1700 x 2) a bit of a difference. I like your idea of just using rock instead of a concrete base ... I have a pile of rock already from a past project. And the blocks might be good .... I'll have to price it out. It would be an awful lot of blocks....it doesn't matter what it looks like ...it'll be underground. The primary reason I was thinking concrete base was to keep the tank from shifting / tilting and breaking the pipe connections.
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Mike |
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#17 (permalink) |
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Super Member
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Tyler, Texas
Posts: 7,809
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Mike,
There are three advantages to the round gravel over a cement pad that I can think of. First, it will drain water. A little flooding probably wouldn't be a big deal for this, but you still want the water to drain as quickly as possible. Off the top of my head, I'd think 6 to 8 inches of gravel would work. Second, is the rock will spread the load and wont move on you regardless of soil conditions. A concrete pad may do this if not engineered properly. With 5,000 gallons and water weighing around 8 pounds a gallon, 40,000 pounds of water on the cement pad becomes a number that exceeds common building methods. If your soil has allot of movement when it dries, cracks, expands and freezes, then keeping a cement pad flat and level will be even more complicated. Third, gravel is very easy to install. As for the block and your depth, I just had another thought. Why use anything? Slope the dirt back so that you can mow it, plant grass and leave it alone. It's more dirt to remove, but that's allot cheaper then buying allot of block or pouring a retaining wall. If I understand the problem correctly, all you need is for the tank to be partially below grade and not have any preasure against the walls from the surrounding soils. I think a gravel pad and sloped walls is a cheap, easy way to do this. Eddie
__________________
My Goals for 2008 1. Fishing and Hunting with my kids. 2. Build my storage Shed. 3. Put my outside access bathroom together. 4. Fence in a quarter acre for Turkeys. 5. Build my gazebo for my front pasture. 6. Finish back pasture and plant it in Bermuda. 7. Start my food plots. 8. Build a comfortable deer stand for two. 9. Build a wood burning fireplace in my home. 10. New flooring in my home. 11. Build a pasture sprayer. 12. Get my old jeep running. |
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#18 (permalink) |
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Silver Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Southeast Kansas
Posts: 240
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i, too, have considered various incarnations of the rain water storage scenario. it always comes down to me finding some places more economical to divert the funds to, and it never gets done. here are the problems i see that need to be overcome:
- pre filter to keep dirt leaves etc out. - insect filter to keep skeeters and others from either setting up a breeding ground or going in after water and dying inside the tank. - overflow diversion once the tanks gets full so you have full flow of your guttters to a good location after filling. - if mounted above ground, you can gravity drain but have to deal with the unsightly tank and freezing in the winter - if mounted below ground, you have to pump it out, it's more difficult to clean out periodically and the initial cost is higher for the structurally reinforced tank you have to bury. - if used as a back up source of drinking water, you still have to purify it because a screen filter will keep debris out but not bacteria, other microbes, cysts and eggs found in bird doo doo. - if used as a source of irrigation, better than chlorinated or city water but hardly worth the cost in our area. Running the numbers, a gallon of water from our municipality costs somehwere in the range of .5 to 1 cent per gallon. Thus, 5,000 gallons costs 25 to 50 bucks. It takes a lot of months to recover the cost of installing and maintaining a rain water collection system, ergo, it never gets done around here. If you just want to irrigate, dig a pond and sink a sump pump in it. It's cheaper and easier to maintain and the natural biodiversity keeps things in check. If you want to store drinking water, add a cheap storage tank of the correct size someplace out of the way, fill it with well/city water and cap it. Periodically drain it (use it on the garden or lawn, of course) and refill. Done. amp
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#19 (permalink) |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Charlottesville, VA, USA
Posts: 2,499
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I'd have a couple problems with one below grade: 1) need to pump it out with a sump pump or you'll always be facing pump suction problems, 2) can't really drain it for the winter (maybe you don't with it below grade though).
I bought a big wet/dry vac. It works well, with a couple of the plastic "snouts" put together, to clean out the tanks. I don't filter out any stuff that comes off the roofs. I've also used a little portable air tank to back blow the tanks, to clear them of some silt or algae blocking the outlet. If you have to put below grade, I'd put it into a hole with some sloped walls. Or put above grade and use some scrubs to hide it. Maintenance would be whole lot easier on an above grade one. You have to drain them for the winter though. My outlet spigot is in a big plug that screws out for the winter. On the inlet, I just have a "Y" tee (3 to 4 inch) dropping into the tank on the down side of the "Y". When the tank is full, water just flows straight through the tee. Of course, it also overflows the tank. For mosquitoes, just add a 1/2 cup of kerosene a day or so after the tank is filled each time. Reminds me. Need to do this on mine, as that first 1/2 inch of rain filled them all again. This really hot weather can bring the skeeters out. Ralph
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The natural gardener God's original intent |
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#20 (permalink) |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Angleton & Bastrop & Paige Texas
Posts: 1,546
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Eddie - I'd love to do the slope idea - but that would take an additional 12' of radius that I don't have in the location.
amp: 1. check 2.check 3. check 4. non issues 5. another non issue -- I don't plan on cleaning 5,000 gal tanks on any kind of basis. 6. check ... I do that with the well water also. price per gal of water ..... what's it worth if you have no supplier and it's all up to you to provide or not have any period?
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Mike |
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