
04/05/11, 03:18 PM
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Fair to adequate Mod
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Join Date: May 2002
Location: Between Crosslake and Emily Minnesota
Posts: 13,721
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First of all, Infiltrator chambers are no more efficient at evaporating wastewater than a gravel-filled trench is. Besides, even if all the water evaporated, the nutrients/pathogens would still be in the soil waiting for the next rainfall to move them downward toward the aquifer.
We have a plumbed basement and a shallow septic tank. Our basement wastewater is pumped "up" to the septic tank via a pit and sump pump. The upstairs wastewater flows by gravity to the septic tank. Wastewater from the septic tank flows by gravity to our drainfield.
Minnesota code requires that septic tanks not be buried too deep because they are too hard to service if the septic tank pumper has to dig down seven feet to remove the tank's manhole. Minnesota code also requires that the bottom of any drainfield trench be no deeper than 48" below the surface regardless of the distribution method used in the trench (eg, infiltrator chambers, gravel, EZFlow, etc).
In your case, "what happens when if the electricitygoes out?" You stop using water. If you don't the wastewater will start coming up throught the basement floor drains.
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