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- Newsgroups: misc.consumers.house
- Path: sparky!uunet!think.com!paperboy.osf.org!osf.org!wwang
- From: wwang@osf.org (Weidong Wang)
- Subject: Summary to my septic tank maintenance question
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.215154.9019@osf.org>
- Sender: news@osf.org (USENET News System)
- Organization: Open Software Foundation
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1993 21:51:54 GMT
- Lines: 234
-
-
-
- This is to summarize the responses that I have received regarding my question
- on septic tank maintenance.
-
- First of all, here is my original questions:
-
- ---------------- from wwang@osf.org -----------------------
-
- This must have been discussed several times, but I did not catch any threads.
-
- This is to do with whether a spetic tank ever needs pumping, and whether one
- should add any additive to it.
-
- I know there are several sayings. One saying is that a septic tank should never
- need pumping, nor any additive. Natural bacteria should do the job. Another
- saying is that one should not add any additive, but one needs to have the tank
- pumped every 2 or 3 years. Still some say that if you ever had your septic tank
- pumped, it is an indication that it is not working well, that there is not
- enough bacteria there.
-
- I suppose that by letting detergent, bleaches, soaps. clearners, etc go to the
- septic tank, certain amount of bacteria in the tank will be killed. That means
- that for a long period of time, the septic tank may work less efficiently. So,
- is this a good reason to add bactieria additive to increase the batecria
- amount?
-
- I just saw an ad for a product called Saniflo, "the natural bacteria additive".
- It claims to be better than other additive on the market, and is USDA approved,
- and can even eliminate any clog in the leaching field (pipes). Has anyone heard
- od this product and/or used? Waht is your opinion? They sell a 6 yr supply for
- $154.00.
-
-
- ------------- from neilson@osf.org (Peter Neilson) --------------------
-
- Let's think about what naturally goes into a septic tank, and what
- happens in a septic tank.
-
- Input:
- - water
- - human waste, containing bacteria
- - other material, some of it animal, some vegetable, some mineral,
- from laundry, garbage disposal, children's toys flushed down
- toilet, etc.
-
- Action:
- - The bacteria decompose some of the waste into a more liquid form,
- over time. Regardless of what you put into this rather random
- biochemical reaction, some solid matter will dissolve, some will be
- suspended or emulsified, and some will fall to the bottom. The
- bacteria will do fairly little to liquify the sand that washed out
- of your gardening pants or the rubber duck your four-year-old boy
- swims in the flushing toilet.
-
- - The liquid from the septic tank flows out of the tank into the
- leach field. It flows from an outlet at the top of the tank, so
- that the leach field pipes do not become clogged with solid that
- falls to the bottom of the tank.
-
- Analysis:
- - You usually don't need to add any more bacteria, because your
- natural activities put plenty of bacteria in every day.
-
- - Saniflo might conceivably help some unusual situation, but I've
- never needed it, nor have I known of anyone who does. My septic
- tank man says he has a product like that available for those who
- insist on it, but he says that no one really needs it. Also, if
- none of the septic tank additives does any good, then it's easy for
- ALL of them to be the best!
-
- - You must have the tank pumped out every few years, maybe three or
- four, because it fills up with sludge. If the sludge reaches the
- leach field, you'll need to have an entire new leach field
- installed, at a cost of several thousand dollars. A hundred
- dollars every couple of years for pumping out the tank is money
- well spent. If you can find out who has regularly pumped out your
- tank, ask him how often it was needed. If you have to get a new
- guy in, ask him for his best guess. It has been my observation
- that septic tank men are sometimes stupid, but never dishonest.
- I don't think that a dishonest man would want to bother getting so
- dirty.
-
- --Peter
-
-
- ------------- from Charles Ross Peters <peters@mcnc.org> ------------------
-
- If you know how a septic tank and leach field works and use a little common
- sense then the answers to these questions aren't so difficult. First,
- your county or city health department has rules on how big a septic tank
- and leach field should be for the soil conditions and the expected number
- of occupants of your house. As you are aware the bacteria in this system
- break down what goes into it. Anything going into your tank that
- kills bacteria is bad, however, these bacteria are remarkably resilient
- creatures and their population can bouce back very quickly ( several hours
- or at most a few days) as long as you don't kill them all. Which is very
- difficult to do, unless you really screw up. So, in general, a normal
- healthy septic system needs no new innocualtions of bacteria to do its job
- efficiently.
-
- Secondly, bacteria do a fairly good job of breaking things down, but bacteria
- cannot liquify EVERYTHING that goes into your septic system. Those things
- that are not liquified eventually settle into a sludge on the bottom of
- your tank. SO, eventually every tank will need to be pumped to remove the
- solids. How often your system needs to be pumped depends upon variables
- such as the size of your tank and how fast you are putting nondigestable
- material into it. For some people this will be decades, but for others
- this will be a matter of a few years. An easy way to check is to take
- the lid of your tank and stick something fairly long and rigid down into
- your tank and see how much sludge you have. Once the sludge gets high
- enough to get into your field lines you are in for trouble, since they soon
- become clogged. You should pump the solids from your tank before it
- reaches this point and all will be well. Any questions?
-
- Charles Peters
- peters@mcnc.org
-
-
-
- ------------- from Rick Farnbach <fsf@wv.MENTORG.COM> ---------------------
-
- I was going to ask you to summarize the responses you will get, but you
- already have. Here's my response, taken from the above.
-
- You should have your septic tank inspected at least once a year. It will
- probably need to be pumped about every three years. You can do the inspection
- yourself by checking the level of sediment in the tank with a long stick.
-
- A septic tank works by collecting solid matter from your sewage. Some of this
- solid matter is decomposed, liquified, and carried off in the waste water to
- the drain field. The rest is either too complex to decompose, or is insoluble
- material. These solids can only be removed by having the tank pumped.
-
- Many people feel that they have never had their septic tank back up or
- overflow onto their lawn and therefore they do not need to have it pumped.
- First of all, waiting for you system to fail before attempting to prevent the
- failure is idiotic. Second, the purpose of a septic system is not limitted to
- keeping smelly sewage off your lawn. Your septic system's purpose is to
- dispose of household sewage a sanitary way. It accomplishes this by fully
- decomposing solid material before releasing it to the ground water. When your
- septic tank fills with sediment, this solid matter is carried directly into
- the drain field, and then into the ground water. This, of course, transmits
- parasites and various diseases into the drinking water of people downstream,
- possibly including yourself.
-
- Dumping raw sewage into your drain field is more than just a biological
- hazard. This raw sewage can plug the pipes to your field just like you can
- get a plugged toilet. The difference being that it costs significantly more
- to have these drain lines snaked out than to have your toilet unplugged. Even
- more insidious, raw sewage in the drain field *will* eventually coat it with a
- waterproof coating of fats, plastics, and insoluble salts. When this happens
- not only will the lawn be flooded, but a new drain field will have to be
- installed. Because it may take decades for a drain field to plug some people
- think that their system is somehow immune. Given enough time and enough
- solid, untreated sewage, *all* drain fields will plug.
-
- Weidong> I suppose that by letting detergent, bleaches, soaps. clearners, etc go to the
- Weidong> septic tank, certain amount of bacteria in the tank will be killed. That means
- Weidong> that for a long period of time, the septic tank may work less efficiently. So,
- Weidong> is this a good reason to add bactieria additive to increase the batecria amount?
-
- There is lots of biological material in the septic tank that buffers the
- effects of these cleaners, lyes, and other caustics put into the system. The
- effect these have on your bacteria population is not as great as you would
- think. Think about it, do you really think your septic system is *ever* going
- to be a sanitary environment? Even if these cleaners could wipe out your
- bacteria population, they would be equally capable of killing any bacteria you
- added deliberately. Finally, attempting to increase the amount of bacteria
- going into your septic system by dumping a couple tablespoons full of granules
- into it is like trying to speed up a river by running your garden hose into
- it.
-
- Weidong> I just saw an ad for a product called Saniflo, "the natural bacteria additive".
- Weidong> It claims to be better than other additive on the market, and is USDA approved,
- Weidong> and can even eliminate any clog in the leaching field (pipes). Has anyone heard
- Weidong> od this product and/or used? Waht is your opinion? They sell a 6 yr supply for
- Weidong> $154.00.
-
- I'm sure there are several clogs it cannot attack. If something is insoluble
- it is insoluble. USDA approval probably means just that it won't kill you if
- you use it, not that it does wonders for your system. It doesn't matter what
- bacteria these are there are just things in sewage that *cannot* be liquified
- by bacteria. That's why public sewage treatment plants still have to dredge
- out sludge from their tanks regularly.
-
- In summary, check your septic system anually. When the sediment has started
- to accumulate have it pumped. Ask a local professional or county agent or go
- to the library to find out how to perform this check yourself. There is no
- evidence that adding bacteria to your system helps it and there are lots of
- compelling arguments that say it doesn't.
-
- Rick
-
-
- ------------- from perley@balltown.cma.com (Don Perley) -------------------
-
- What would USDA approval mean? The EPA should be the federal agency
- concerned with septic systems. Most state environmental agencies will
- tell you that additives generally aren't needed, and don't help.
-
- Even if you give them the (large) benifit of the doubt, and assume
- that using the product will eliminate all need for pumping, you will
- be spending as much on the additive as you would just pumping every
- few years anyway. Last summer we got pumped for the first time in
- 8 years, and it costed $100.
-
- -don perley
-
-
-
- ------------- from au363@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Ken Sussmann) -------------
-
- In general, unless you are dumping a great deal of chemicals into your
- septic tank, bacteria levels should be okay. After all everytime you use
- the toilet you are sending more bacteria into the tank. Yes, tanks do
- need to be pumped. Bacteria are great but they can't break down
- everything in a reasonable time. A rule of thumb is 2 to 3 years but the
- whole idea is to make sure that solids do not get pushed out of the tank
- into your leaching field which will clog it and mean big dollars for
- repair. If you have an inspection port you can put a stick down to
- determine how deep the sludge is in the bottom of the tank to determine
- when to have it pumped.
-
-
-
- --
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- | Weidong Wang | Open Software Foundation |
- | wwang@osf.org | 11 Cambridge Center |
- | (617) 621-7272 | Cambridge, MA 02142 |
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