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Author Topic: Adding A Way To Drain  (Read 3200 times)

umjorge2

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Adding A Way To Drain
« on: May 14, 2014, 05:04:25 pm »
Bought a hot tub second hand and I don't think it has any kind of drain valve or anything that allows it to drain through the internal plumbing (just waiting to confirm that from the person I bought it off of). So I'm wondering can you somehow add a means to drain through the existing piping, using one of the water circulation jets without having to drill a hole in the shell to add one? (I wouldn't be comfortable compromising the shell for that). And since it gets very cold here where I live would there be issues with freezing pipes or anything? My plan would be to have it buried underground (a foot or so) and enter the basement through the foundation and drain into the same pipe that my clothes washer drains into. How about filling it again with water through similar means? Siphoning/pumping it outside is a bit of an issue since I live in a dense city neighborhood and we are not allowed to drain pools or anything like that onto the street/back lane. And in the winter it would be a nightmare to try to drain it like that in sub-zero temperatures and 2 feet of snow on the ground.

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Adding A Way To Drain
« on: May 14, 2014, 05:04:25 pm »

Spatech_tuo

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Re: Adding A Way To Drain
« Reply #1 on: May 14, 2014, 05:56:30 pm »
Bought a hot tub second hand and I don't think it has any kind of drain valve or anything that allows it to drain through the internal plumbing (just waiting to confirm that from the person I bought it off of). So I'm wondering can you somehow add a means to drain through the existing piping, using one of the water circulation jets without having to drill a hole in the shell to add one? (I wouldn't be comfortable compromising the shell for that). And since it gets very cold here where I live would there be issues with freezing pipes or anything? My plan would be to have it buried underground (a foot or so) and enter the basement through the foundation and drain into the same pipe that my clothes washer drains into. How about filling it again with water through similar means? Siphoning/pumping it outside is a bit of an issue since I live in a dense city neighborhood and we are not allowed to drain pools or anything like that onto the street/back lane. And in the winter it would be a nightmare to try to drain it like that in sub-zero temperatures and 2 feet of snow on the ground.

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clover

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Re: Adding A Way To Drain
« Reply #2 on: May 15, 2014, 01:15:36 pm »
2 options to consider, the one given, using a sump pump and the water is gone in 15 minutes or less, OR use a hose placed into the water, turn the water on to fill the hose, then off once water is coming out of the hose keeping the hose below the surface of the water, disconnect the hose and it will siphon drain with in a couple of hours.
Trying to be the unbaised voice of reason.

umjorge2

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Re: Adding A Way To Drain
« Reply #3 on: May 15, 2014, 02:54:51 pm »
Siphoning works in the warm months and if you have a big yard with lots of places the water can go but my yard is very small and I have no lawn to drain it on to and in the harsh winter, i'm sorta hooped because I simply cannot drain such a large amount of water onto the street where it will become an icy/slushy hazard. Trying to make this work in a small space in a dense city neighborhood with harsh cold winters is a challenge! My only real option I figure (and nobody has addressed this) is to have an exterior drain pipe sticking out the side of the house close by to the tub that leads to my washing machine drain in the basement that I can drain into. Seems to make sense to me unless somebody thinks that isn't a good idea for some reason.

TwinCitiesHotSpring

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Re: Adding A Way To Drain
« Reply #4 on: May 15, 2014, 06:29:07 pm »
Siphoning works in the warm months and if you have a big yard with lots of places the water can go but my yard is very small and I have no lawn to drain it on to and in the harsh winter, i'm sorta hooped because I simply cannot drain such a large amount of water onto the street where it will become an icy/slushy hazard. Trying to make this work in a small space in a dense city neighborhood with harsh cold winters is a challenge! My only real option I figure (and nobody has addressed this) is to have an exterior drain pipe sticking out the side of the house close by to the tub that leads to my washing machine drain in the basement that I can drain into. Seems to make sense to me unless somebody thinks that isn't a good idea for some reason.

depending on what's involved that may work, using a sump pump and a 50' or 100' garden hose and bringing it inside and draining it to a sink, bathtub, or toilet would also work

clover

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Re: Adding A Way To Drain
« Reply #5 on: May 16, 2014, 11:29:35 am »
You still have the same 2 options, pump it out, or siphon it out.  The pump adds speed while the siphon still gets the job done.

The secret, in your case, and all others, is where you put the other end of the hose.  Like Twin.. said, run it to the drain inside or outside.
Trying to be the unbaised voice of reason.

umjorge2

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Re: Adding A Way To Drain
« Reply #6 on: May 16, 2014, 03:54:01 pm »
I don't have a close enough drain outside without stretching a hose across the road/back lane to the nearest manhole and then the neighbors noticing a long hose with water running out and it still isn't an option in the winter so really my only option is to drain it inside. Just wondering if anybody else has done it that way, since I'm going to have to rig up something.
« Last Edit: May 16, 2014, 03:57:32 pm by umjorge2 »

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Re: Adding A Way To Drain
« Reply #6 on: May 16, 2014, 03:54:01 pm »

 

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