If the rainwater collection area and tank are more than 15m higher than the house gravity pressure can be sufficient for all domestic uses.
Gutter to tank fall.
Obviously your tank will remain empty without pipes that lead rainwater into your tank.
This article will explain what a dry system is and when it is a suitable option for your property.
To harvest rainwater you need to connect pipework to a downpipe from your roof gutter to your tank that water can flow through.
Put another bracket about 25mm lower at the downpipe end.
The gutter should have a quarter inch of slope per 10 feet.
1 dry systems and 2 wet systems.
Put a gutter bracket on at the high end.
As long as there is a fall and water does not stay in the gutter then all should be fine.
For best results the down pipes to be diverted to the water tank should be no more than five 5 metres from the tank site.
The ideal fall should be approximately 300mm from the top of the inlet pipe to the top of the tank.
1 dry system and 2 wet system.
The tank can be placed on a stand or a garden tap fitted near the bottom of a tank to provide sufficient pressure to fill a watering can or a pool or slowly water a lower garden by hose.
The all new next generation australian designed and manufactured evarain circular tank gutter system is unique in its ability to collect close to 100 of the rain from the roof of your rainwater tank without compromising on the quality of the water collected.
This causes the gutters to overflow during strong downpours.
The gutter pumper only generates a vacuum once the water is more than 20 mm deep and this means that a high point along a straight length of gutter is flushed prior to the vacuum starting.
Put a string line between the two and put the remaining brackets up.
Ask someone to hold the gutter while you loosen and remove the gutter brackets or hangers.
These pipework systems come in two forms.
Pull the gutter down about 3 quarters of an inch lower than it originally was.
Coupled with blockage causing leaves and dirt build up water cannot flow effectively through to the downpipes and water tank.
Put a temporary screw at the back to adjust the pitch.
The terms wet and dry refer to the type of downpipe system between the roof collection area and the tank s.
These pipework systems come in two forms.
When the rain stops the pipe empties into the tank and becomes dry that is there is no residual water in the pipe.
Valleys attract leaves and they flow down the valley en mass.
In a dry system water flows downwards from the gutter through a sloping pipe into the top of the tank.
Ideally you want to position a water tank as close as possible to the house to avoid overhead pipes.