fredsheldon wrote:Yes, all 6 will be together. I only installed a rain gutter on the backside of my house. If gravity does not do the job, I will install a boost pump to push the water to the end of the line. I was planning on just moving the hose from barrel to barrel as necessary. Of course my plan may change in the future. This is a trial and error process for me.
180 gallons with 1 inch of rain - what will a pump do?
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Goldie(Bought New SN 377425)/4" jointer/6" beltsander/12" planer/stripsander/bandsaw/powerstation /Scroll saw/Jig saw /Craftsman 10" ras/Craftsman 6" thicknessplaner/ Dayton10"tablesaw(restoredfromneighborstrashpile)/ Mark VII restoration in 'progress'/ 10E[/size](SN E3779) restoration in progress, a 510 on the back burner and a growing pile of items to be eventually returned to useful life. - aka Red Grange
I'm talking about the watering part of the operation. The hose to the last plant in the yard will be about 75 feet long. I may need to push the water to the end of the line if gravity doesn't do the job.
Fred Sheldon
The Woodlands, Tx
'52 10ER # 60869 (restored in 2012, used as a dedicated drill press), '52 10ER # 88712 (restored 01/2013), 52 10ER # 71368 (in process of restoring), '83 500 Shorty with OPR installed, '83 520 PowerPro with Lift Assist, 6" Joiner, 6" Belt Sander, 18" Jig Saw, 11" Band Saw, 12" ProPlaner, SS Crosscut Table. SS Dust Collector, Hitachi 1/2" router, Work Sharp 3000 with all attachement, Nova G3 Chuck, Universal Tool Rest, Appalachia Tool Works Sled.
fredsheldon wrote:I'm talking about the watering part of the operation. The hose to the last plant in the yard will be about 75 feet long. I may need to push the water to the end of the line if gravity doesn't do the job.
If you're trying to avoid the pump, there are a few passive things you could do. Raise the barrels, you get 0.5 psi for each foot. Make your outlets in the garden start small and get larger as water exits, watering rates will be more consistent from start to finish. Use a narrower hose. Or the easiest/most efficient - Use an array of hoses, either with a splitter or connected to each barrel, so no plant is "waiting in line" too long.
Length of hose won't affect pressure (assuming there aren't lots of ups and downs). Pressure is what it is when it exits the barrel, and can stay near constant over any reasonable length. It's water exiting at a plant that drops the pressure, hence why multiple, narrow hoses is better than one large hose.
I was hoping to use a soaker hose but I believe that requires pressure to force open the small holes. I like the idea of multiple hoses, one from each of the 3 soon to be 6 barrels, all of different lengths. That way I just open all 6 valves at the same time and let them drain the tanks. I won't be performing this operation often, just when there is no rain for a long period and an ample supply of barrel water. I will not be using this water for the grass, only all my rose bushes which line my back yard.
Fred Sheldon
The Woodlands, Tx
'52 10ER # 60869 (restored in 2012, used as a dedicated drill press), '52 10ER # 88712 (restored 01/2013), 52 10ER # 71368 (in process of restoring), '83 500 Shorty with OPR installed, '83 520 PowerPro with Lift Assist, 6" Joiner, 6" Belt Sander, 18" Jig Saw, 11" Band Saw, 12" ProPlaner, SS Crosscut Table. SS Dust Collector, Hitachi 1/2" router, Work Sharp 3000 with all attachement, Nova G3 Chuck, Universal Tool Rest, Appalachia Tool Works Sled.
Installed last 3 rain barrels yesterday and it rained 1/2 inch today which filled 2 of the 3 additional barrels. So it looks like I will be able to collect 240 gallons of rain water for every inch of rain
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Fred Sheldon
The Woodlands, Tx
'52 10ER # 60869 (restored in 2012, used as a dedicated drill press), '52 10ER # 88712 (restored 01/2013), 52 10ER # 71368 (in process of restoring), '83 500 Shorty with OPR installed, '83 520 PowerPro with Lift Assist, 6" Joiner, 6" Belt Sander, 18" Jig Saw, 11" Band Saw, 12" ProPlaner, SS Crosscut Table. SS Dust Collector, Hitachi 1/2" router, Work Sharp 3000 with all attachement, Nova G3 Chuck, Universal Tool Rest, Appalachia Tool Works Sled.
I have a question for all you fluid engineers out there. If I attached all 6 water barrel's outlets together via a manifold, will that increase the water pressure available by a factor of 6?
Fred Sheldon
The Woodlands, Tx
'52 10ER # 60869 (restored in 2012, used as a dedicated drill press), '52 10ER # 88712 (restored 01/2013), 52 10ER # 71368 (in process of restoring), '83 500 Shorty with OPR installed, '83 520 PowerPro with Lift Assist, 6" Joiner, 6" Belt Sander, 18" Jig Saw, 11" Band Saw, 12" ProPlaner, SS Crosscut Table. SS Dust Collector, Hitachi 1/2" router, Work Sharp 3000 with all attachement, Nova G3 Chuck, Universal Tool Rest, Appalachia Tool Works Sled.
2006 Mark 520, 1983 Mark V model 500(soon to be a shorty)/Power Stand mounted Planer/Jointer/Belt Sander/Band Saw/Jigsaw on pwr stand/Scroll saw/Strip Sander/Power Station/Speed Reducer/Increaser/2 Nova chucks.... 12" DeWalt sliding compound mitre saw, 10" Delta tabletop saw, Bosch router and jig saw, Makita circular saw, Graco V-COMP HVLP, Festool CT-26 E Hepa
[quote="pieceseeker"]Ever wonder why city water towers are so high? ]
I take it that's a NO
Fred Sheldon
The Woodlands, Tx
'52 10ER # 60869 (restored in 2012, used as a dedicated drill press), '52 10ER # 88712 (restored 01/2013), 52 10ER # 71368 (in process of restoring), '83 500 Shorty with OPR installed, '83 520 PowerPro with Lift Assist, 6" Joiner, 6" Belt Sander, 18" Jig Saw, 11" Band Saw, 12" ProPlaner, SS Crosscut Table. SS Dust Collector, Hitachi 1/2" router, Work Sharp 3000 with all attachement, Nova G3 Chuck, Universal Tool Rest, Appalachia Tool Works Sled.
fredsheldon wrote:I have a question for all you fluid engineers out there. If I attached all 6 water barrel's outlets together via a manifold, will that increase the water pressure available by a factor of 6?
In theory pressure would be unchanged, but in application the manifold creates drag so you would lose pressure.
The only way to increase psi at the start of the system without decreasing capacity is elevation. After which psi is reduced by disruptions due to outlets, junctions, bends, etc. as well as water leaving the system.
Doing that is no sweat here but be warned that in some western areas it is flat out illegal to collect rain water. That was a frequent discussion on some of the email list I run. It varies from city to city. Fines can be severe...
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farmer
Francis Robinson
I did not equip with Shopsmiths in spite of the setups but because of them.
1 1988 - Mark V 510 (bought new), 4 Poly vee 1 1/8th HP Mark V's, Mark VII, 1 Mark V Mini, 1 Frankensmith, 1 10-ER, 1 Mark V Push-me-Pull-me Drillpress, SS bandsaw, belt sander, jointer, jigsaw, shaper attach, mortising attach, TS-3650 Rigid tablesaw, RAS, 6" long bed jointer, Foley/Belsaw Planer/molder/ripsaw, 1" sander, oscillating spindle/belt sander, Scroll saw, Woodmizer sawmill