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Industrial / Re: Maintaining Water Pressure - Car Wash
« on: October 11, 2017, 02:16:23 PM »
Thanks for the response. I found out that there is a two inch water meter/main that supplies my car wash. How can I go about determining if the water supply is adequate, so that I can work to boost the pressure? What type of business deals with type of issue? I've talked to two plumbers and I'm thinking that I need to find someone who specializes in these issues, but not sure what to look for. I like the idea of a large supply tank. I've got a tank to capture the reject water from my reverse osmosis system and I pump that water into my rinse tank via a float valve and submersible pump. I've got the float for the city water shutting off when the rinse tank is about 2/3 full and reject water fills to the top before shutting off. I've been thinking about adding a feed from the city water to the reject tank and using a mix of reject water and city water to gravity feed my IBA rinse tanks. The tank is 400 gallons and I think that it would easily keep up with demand and eliminate the need to use the 1 inch float valve. I'm planning to have a larger rinse tank to feed my self service pumps, so that I won't need a 1 inch float valve on that side. I've also had the thought of capturing rain water to use for all rinse functions (self service and IBA). Thinking that I could do a combination captured rain water and city water with that type of set up. Water is by far my biggest expense, so reducing that expense by any amount would be helpful to my bottom line. The city charges me 1:1 for sewage costs, so the savings would be multiplied if I could capture some rain water for rinsing. Do you have any thoughts on this idea? Am I dreaming? I appreciate your help.