grnmon97
Mechanical
- Sep 14, 2005
- 3
Good Day.. Recently converted a seasonal Cape Cod cottage to a year round home and mechanicals (forced hot air furnace/ac and hot water heater) were installed in a newly insulated and encapsulated crawl space with a newly added sump pump.. The crawl space has one section (1/4 of crawl space) where you enter from a bulkhead that is roughly 5' below the floor joists. The other areas of the crawl space are roughly 2' below the joists. The crawl space had a history of flooding with a high water line approximately 8" up on the cinder block retaining wall that outlines this lowest section. The sump pump was installed approximately 12-18" below the existing floor (low point of crawl space) and with the high water table, the pump runs every 60-75 seconds. I recently had the installer back to discuss options as the pump discharge is directly under bedrooms and extremely noisy with a series of elbows to exit the crawl space. We discussed a larger basin for the pump and/or perhaps a secondary switch to allow for more water into the pit before pumping. There were no guarantees that this would work, but they are options to try. I have no manufacturing background but my way of thinking tells me if the highest level of water in the crawl space was 8" above the current floor level (based on water mark on the cinders), if I was to raise the floor and essentially the sump pump up 1 foot with a crushed stone/sand mix (don't need 5' height for any function I can think of), wouldn't this essentially reduce the amount of pumping significantly and reduce it to only occur during extreme high water table situations? Are there other factors to consider in doing this beyond the amount of available head space? Interested to hear thoughts on this. Thanks in advance!!