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Chuck Richard

Handy little tool for winterizing

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Chuck how about explaining how you made it and use it so others will understand better.

Not having to worry about freezing weather here except a couple times a year I don't put anti freeze in my pump.

Jon

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I took a male hose end with a hose barb and attached a peice of hose to it. On the other end I placed a air valve into a bushing then into another hose barb and attached it to the hose. When I gei home and its going to freeze I just screw this onto my pump and throw the compressed air to it. I can make my whole system water free in just a few minutes.

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Got it now, your basically draining your pump and re-priming it later.

Sounds faster then adding anti-freeze each time.

Anyone else have tricks they would like to share?

Jon

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I just picked up an Alkota unit and it has an air valve on the pump for this exact purpose. I picked it up in NC (70 degrees) pumped all water out with air. got home to Ohio (20 degrees) I ran water through the machine just to see if anything freezed, and guess what, nothing froze, or atleast not completely. I didn't turn on the machine but I let the water flow and it came right out of the hose like it was the middle of the summer. I think all pumps should have this feature, or atleast offer it.

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Mike, it has gotton down to around 18 degrees with no problem. It will leave a few droplets of water behind but not enough to cause damage or problems. It used to take me about 45 min. to winterize, now it takes about 5.'

When ever I get to the job I open the water valve and let the pump prime its self and then I go to town. To keep water out of the intake lines I feed air through til it starts bubbling in the tank the I shut the valve that lets water flow. The trapped air holds all water in tank so my intake lines won't freeze.

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Screw it into the water intake. You can just hold the air to it til it starts blowing out the end of your pressure hose. It takes me about a min. per gallon to evacuate my system. Each unit holds 3 gal. of water from pump to hose end. The intake side usally has between 5-6 gal. Empty all your intake filters to keep them from busting. I forgot to about a month ago and the filter housing was laying on the ground the next morning. Kinda set me back a little but not a big problem.

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