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