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Thread: Reduction of Backwash water loss ideas.

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  1. #1
    duraleigh Guest

    Default Re: Reduction of Backwash water loss ideas.

    Hi, John,

    I'm a sand filter guy, too.

    I swear to you I have not been drinking (yet)

    Two sand filters. (plenty of folks giving up perfectly good ones cheap) Backwash one into the other. When the backwash cycle is complete, valve off the one you just dirtied up to remove it from the system.

    Go back to filtering from the one you just backwashed. At your leisure, "backwash" the now "removed" filter with a seperate water source. What that source might be is the snag. I doubt a garden hose will do it so you'd have to probably cycle some well water through the pump into the filter which would call for another valve on the pump.

    Hmmm, after rereading this post, maybe it IS time to start drinkin'!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    Indiana.
    Posts
    700

    Default Re: Reduction of Backwash water loss ideas.

    Quote Originally Posted by Poconos
    John,
    Since you live in a rural area do you have a stream on your property? Water wouldn't be as clean as a well and you would have to shock it to get rid of critter doodoo etc but the TA would probably be a low lower. 800...wow. I have two wells and a stream and when fill is needed I use the stream. Also, any way to cat rain water from roof gutters, if you have them, and use that for fill? Just a couple thoughts.
    Al
    I do have a pond, but at the time when I most need to add water in the heat of the summer is when the pond is lowest, and I'm afraid the deal would be the same with catching rain water. I have considered that though, and am still seriously considering it for irrigation of landscaping. The part that hurts is that I have pumped more than enough water out of the pool due to rain over the off season to cover the backwashing and evaporation all summer. I always vacuum and backwash when I get enough rain that the water level is high to take advantage of it.

    Our water is so bad that if you wash a car with it, you have to use the windshield washers to remove the film that is left on the windshield before you can drive! I have never used borax or baking soda in my pool, and probably never will. I started on my 5th gallon of muriatic of the season last night to get my pH down from 7.8 to 7.5. I don't want to make it worse! Thanks for the comments.

    I'm leaning toward seeing what running tapwater through to backwash does for me during the move, just to see. Maybe it would cut my backwash time enough to be worthwhile.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    395

    Default Re: Reduction of Backwash water loss ideas.

    When we have had water restrictions rather than backwash my DE filter I would just take the band clamp off, open it up and wash it off with a hose. This would use maybe 30-50 gallons of water versus 300-500 when backwashing it. Actually gets the filter a lot cleaner than backwashing.

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