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Septic Tanks.
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Does anyone live in a house which has a septic tank?
Can you explain how they are 'managed' please.
Can you explain how they are 'managed' please.
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There are different types. The simplest is a single chamber tank, others have successive chambers where, in stages, the sewage is settled and digested by bacteria. All the different types are emptied periodically by a tanker, but most of the time only the first chamber is emptied in multi-chamber tanks. The multi-chamber ones most often have an outlet from the final chamber and the effluent runs into ground soak areas and in some cases into watercourses, lakes or the sea (depending on local regulations). Single chamber tanks rarely have an outlet to anywhere these days and therefore usually have to be emptied of the entire contents before they are full to overflowing. The latest approach is to have mini treatment plants installed, some of which are smaller than a multi-chamber septic tank, and these are often certified as producing effluent that can be discharged directly onto agricultural land and/or into watercourses.
There are very easy to manage Tilly; we have ours emptied once a year in the winter when its easy to get to but some people leave it longer.
Generally there are 2 pits or tanks. The effluence enters the first tank and it naturally decomposes with the liquid draining off into the second chamber. This then soaks away underground. We have both emptied once a year to make sure nothing backs up but we do nothing else.
Its best to avoid flushing anything unatural down the loo. We read the packet and find a loo cleaner that is suitable for septic tanks. Loo roll is fine, it disintegrates, but nothing much else should be flushed or poured down the sink if that drains into the tank too.
Water rates are reduced for no sewage and the cost of our annual empty is £80.
Generally there are 2 pits or tanks. The effluence enters the first tank and it naturally decomposes with the liquid draining off into the second chamber. This then soaks away underground. We have both emptied once a year to make sure nothing backs up but we do nothing else.
Its best to avoid flushing anything unatural down the loo. We read the packet and find a loo cleaner that is suitable for septic tanks. Loo roll is fine, it disintegrates, but nothing much else should be flushed or poured down the sink if that drains into the tank too.
Water rates are reduced for no sewage and the cost of our annual empty is £80.
I wish we still had our septic tank, we've been connected to the main drains for about six years with nothing but trouble. IE, toilets backing up, garden getting flooded and all the time Wessex Water just say there is nothing they can do as the pumps are working at full capacity, so being on a main sewer is not necessarily better than a septic tank, not round here anyway.
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