It's at ground level and is the floors in the house. No basement. I pulled up the carpet in one room to replace with laminate flooring and the floor is concrete after the carpet and padding was removed.Hello; is the slab in what might be considered a basement with the slab floor below the outside ground level or is the slab at or near ground level which makes it the floor of the rooms of the house?
Is your sump raised off the floor? The water level in my sump wouldn't really give me much of a reservoir to drip into and if I raise the water level I would be afraid either the sump or the reservoir would over run during a power outage. I have a bad habit of over thinking things sometimes.
Is your sump raised off the floor? The water level in my sump wouldn't really give me much of a reservoir to drip into and if I raise the water level I would be afraid either the sump or the reservoir would over run during a power outage. I have a bad habit of over thinking things sometimes.
The overflow of water during a power outage is not a problem right now because the sump will hold the water draining from the main tank. I was concerned if I place a bulkhead at the running water level in the sump for drip purpose when there is a power loss all the water will flow out of the bulkhead into the reservoir for pumping outside instead of filling up the sump.Hello; I may have lost track of the questions we are trying to address.
I believe you mentioned at some point you have solved the overflow of water from the tank when the power is off, is that correct? If so the flooding no longer happens.
The other issue is the constant drip system and where the excess water will drain to. The photos do not help much with that. I saw in one picture a refrigerator in the next room. I think it has an in door water system. That likely has a drain of some sort.
I also will guess that the frig is in a kitchen and there will be a sink. That sink will have a drain.
The laundry room should have a drain. If you have central air there will be a condensate drain.
The point I am making being there are likely several drains already in the home and perhaps you can find one close to the tank to run the excess water into.