The Hopefulls wrote:
What do you all think is the best way to have a low water cut off?
I must admit I have only had a quick breeze of your system, but I'm guessing you have the standard flood and drain setup with a main FT and a sump?
If that is the case I have been working on the similar issue after experiencing same type of issues (low water levels in FT due to a system failure).
What I have done in my system:
- raised the float on the FT pump as high as possible
- increased the size of my sumps
- intend to put in a backup pump in the sump (you need non-return valves on the pump line for that)
The main thing I wanted to protect against was sump pump failure, as that is where I lost my water from (overflowing sump). The larger sumps was so that if the system was fully flooded and power went out, I could hold most of the water from the beds in the sump, and when the power came back it would be returned to the FT. Both pumps in the sump will be float switch controlled, and the sump pump floats will be set at different levels, so the second pump only kicks in if the 1st pump cannot cope (is dead, inlet blocked, etc).
The higher level FT float switch, was an added measure against a dual sump pump failure (and to get me through until I purchase the second pump for the sump). Also will help when we are away on holidays, and someone else is looking after the system in summer, and forgets to do a water topup.
Other measures I am working on is:
- further increasing the volume of air to the FT, and
- some sort of backup pumping in the FT to keep the water moving in a power outage (likely a DC bildge pump).