Pettrix
Platinum Member
I installed a fine air tube diffuser inside my first chamber in my 2-chamber septic system and ran air to the diffuser 24/7 for the past 6 months. It costs me about $3.00 per month in electricity. It's a new system on a new home.
Here are the results after 1/2 a year of use:
A - The septic tank has NO smell once you open the tank lid. It actually has an "earthy" smell, kind of like soil when wet.
B - There are NO solids in the tank. It's just liquids.
C - The effluent filter in chamber #2, before it heads to the leach field, was very clean. No debris on it, just some slime bacteria.
This proves to me that aerobic systems are way better than anaerobic systems. Studies I read show 10x faster digestion and breakdown of wastes and the effluent is much cleaner as it heads into the leach field. This also helps with the biomat in the leach field. One is less likely to have a failure in the biomat with an aerobic system. In addition, I might never have to pump the tank since the solids (poop & toilet paper) are breaking down so quickly.
My last home had an anaerobic system that smelled really bad when accessed and required pumping every 5 or so years. The methane gas produced by anaerobic breakdown is very caustic to the concrete septic tank. Since the aerobic system has basically no methane gas, the longevity of the concrete tank is indefinite.
I'm now a believer in aerobic septic systems. The entire setup cost me $300 in parts and labor was free (me). :laughing:
Here are the results after 1/2 a year of use:
A - The septic tank has NO smell once you open the tank lid. It actually has an "earthy" smell, kind of like soil when wet.
B - There are NO solids in the tank. It's just liquids.
C - The effluent filter in chamber #2, before it heads to the leach field, was very clean. No debris on it, just some slime bacteria.
This proves to me that aerobic systems are way better than anaerobic systems. Studies I read show 10x faster digestion and breakdown of wastes and the effluent is much cleaner as it heads into the leach field. This also helps with the biomat in the leach field. One is less likely to have a failure in the biomat with an aerobic system. In addition, I might never have to pump the tank since the solids (poop & toilet paper) are breaking down so quickly.
My last home had an anaerobic system that smelled really bad when accessed and required pumping every 5 or so years. The methane gas produced by anaerobic breakdown is very caustic to the concrete septic tank. Since the aerobic system has basically no methane gas, the longevity of the concrete tank is indefinite.
I'm now a believer in aerobic septic systems. The entire setup cost me $300 in parts and labor was free (me). :laughing: