I want an emergency overflow drain for my washing machine in the basement, before I go and put laminate flooring there. The washer drain line is in the wall, and I’d have to put in a pump to make use of that one.
I was thinking that I could get a shower tray or similar for the washer to sit in and then cut a trench from that drain to the sump pump across the room. Drop a PVC line into it (angled down to pump!) and repair the concrete…then if the washer overflows, the tray catches it, and it drains into the sump pump, where it is safely pumped out over my lawn.
Now tell me what the best way to cut the concrete is, and if this idea is totally out there flapping or if it will work.
+ Production speeds up to 25 cycles per minute + Fixed speed conveyors and film advance at 60 feet per minute + Adjustable seal head for centering seals on packages up to 4″ high + Upper film cradle with pin wheel perforators + Programmable Allen-Bradley PLC with touch screen control + Vertical photo eyes for product detection + 120VAC, 20 amp operation with ICFM @ 80PSI air requirement Options: + Film economizer + Light package take away + Mushroom seal knives + USDA approved belts + 220V wiring
The Clamco 6700EX provides a generous 20″ x 26″ x 6″H seal area and a maximum 25 packages-per-minute throughput. Key features now standard on the 6700EX include constant heat solid-seal knife sealing system with independent digital temperature controls for seal knives, upper film cradle with film splitter utilizing center-folded film up to 21″ wide, and a film advance system with standard pinch rollers for film control and better economy. The system also comes complete with Mitsubishi PLC control, self-aligning lower seal pads, fixed speed conveyors with product staging capability, vertical and horizontal product sensors, micro-perf perforators for uniform air evacuation, interlocked seal area guarding, emergency stop, and scrap removal system. Available options include closing conveyor for small package transfer ability.