Tinaco or pressure water system
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Rolly
martygraw
sparks
7 posters
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Tinaco or pressure water system
Got a friend trying to talk me into a bladder tank type water system and I'm leaning towards a tinaco. He says the cost is not much more ... but of that I'm not sure because I haven't found all the components in one package. Tinaco for me is just so simple with less things to go wrong ... especially if street pressure will fill the tinaco. The only positive I can see to a pressure system is no tinaco on your roof
Re: Tinaco or pressure water system
Sparks, even with a Tinaco you will prob need a elect. pump to fill it.
martygraw- Share Holder
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Age : 85
Location : Jocotepec
Re: Tinaco or pressure water system
Even with the lousy pressure we have in this part of Joco I don't have a pump and the tinaco is on top of the second floor.
In Melaque when we have water I can squirt a hose 15+ meters ... way more than needed to fill a 3 meter high tinaco. I also have an aljibe in the ground for when there is no street water and I will need a pump for that
In Melaque when we have water I can squirt a hose 15+ meters ... way more than needed to fill a 3 meter high tinaco. I also have an aljibe in the ground for when there is no street water and I will need a pump for that
Re: Tinaco or pressure water system
My house is served by an aljibe with a bladder type pressure system. For 10 years, it has preformed well. There are by-pass valves for the rare times when the power fails. I have friends with roof-top tinacos. My system gives a better shower and the washing machine works much better.
Re: Tinaco or pressure water system
Thanks Rolly. Now to shop for a 'system' and sizing. Price goes up pretty fast as the size goes up. So when your electric is out you rely on street pressure or you have a tinaco as well
Re: Tinaco or pressure water system
Street water.
The sizing issue was explained to me: The larger the tank, the less often it has to run, but it will have to run a bit longer to recharge. The salesman insisted that the larger tank will be a little less expensive to operate. True? ¿Quién saba?
We bought a mid-size tank.
One thing to be careful about, if the pump runs out of source water and draws air, it will be damaged $$$.
The sizing issue was explained to me: The larger the tank, the less often it has to run, but it will have to run a bit longer to recharge. The salesman insisted that the larger tank will be a little less expensive to operate. True? ¿Quién saba?
We bought a mid-size tank.
One thing to be careful about, if the pump runs out of source water and draws air, it will be damaged $$$.
Re: Tinaco or pressure water system
Guess we're lucky. Water pressure from the street where we live is adequate to fill 2 tinacos (we don't have an aljibe) and we have acceptable pressure in the shower and washer works OK. We have no pump. Guess it depends on where you live and your house configuration. Our tinacos are on the highest part of the roof, so the whole thing works on gravity. If gravity stops working, we're SOL:)
eñe- Share Holder
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Join date : 2010-04-05
Re: Tinaco or pressure water system
The guy that rebuilds pumps in Melaque charges $15-20us but maybe not if the windings are fried. I guess a shutoff float could turn off the pump but there's another cost and something else to go wrong.
My tinaco won't be much over 3 meters high so that's a little over a meter above a shower head. Hmmmmm...
My tinaco won't be much over 3 meters high so that's a little over a meter above a shower head. Hmmmmm...
Re: Tinaco or pressure water system
When a pump sucks air, the resulting failure is mechanical not electrical.
Re: Tinaco or pressure water system
When my pump started sucking sand it was mechanical and a rebuild was $160mx
Re: Tinaco or pressure water system
Older foto but now have two tinacos. One above second floor and one above first - one for each lot. Since we have high water pressure in the area the plumber installed a series of one-way valves that allow street water directly to the house. When no city water (pretty common) it switches to tinaco pressure.
Here's the project
http://casa-pinal-villa.blogspot.com/
Here's the project
http://casa-pinal-villa.blogspot.com/
Re: Tinaco or pressure water system
If you have an older home, one reason to not get a pressure system is perhaps more leaks due to the new and unfamiliar pressure in the pipes, etc.
You can put the pump after the tinaco to get the best of both worlds.
You can put the pump after the tinaco to get the best of both worlds.
Intercasa- Share Holder
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Location : Chapala / Zapopan
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Re: Tinaco or pressure water system
We have a pressure system and I am thinking about adding a Tinaco to it because of all the power outages around here. Shortly after the power goes off, we have no water. Grrrr.
Mainecoons- Share Holder
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Re: Tinaco or pressure water system
You could put in a larger pressure tank (ours is about 60 gallons) so you'd have water longer...
or you could buy a small honda generator which would not only take care of your water situation but allow you to plug in other things in an emergency...
Honday EU 1000 or 2000 with an inverter.
or you could buy a small honda generator which would not only take care of your water situation but allow you to plug in other things in an emergency...
Honday EU 1000 or 2000 with an inverter.
ferret- Share Holder
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Join date : 2010-05-23
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