GreenEnvy22
Senior Member
This summer I added a sink and faucet to my cellar where I age all my wine. Made it a lot easier than lugging over carboys and buckets to the laundry room.
Adding supply line was easy, but there is no drain in the cellar. So I've just got a bucket under the sink and when it gets close to full I go dump it in laundry room. I'd like to get something a bit more permanent setup.
Ideally I would just have it drain via gravity but being a cellar, walls are all concrete. So drilling a 2" hole into the next room (furnace room) would be a pain, plus it's a good 30' to the nearest drain I could tie in to. Not sure there would be sufficient drop over that length for gravity to do it's thing. I could break up the floor in the cellar to tie into the main drain line, but thats way more involved than I want to get. Cellar is just like 25' x 5', and wine making area is just 10x5.
I was thinking of putting a small pump, like an aquarium pump or bilge pump, in the bottom of the bucket, something with a 1/2" or 3/4" output. Those typically do 300-400 gallons per hour, plenty for just occasionally draining the bucket. I'd drill a small 1" hole in cellar wall, and run some PEX over to the bathroom and tie it into that drain. Being pumped, the lack of slope shouldn't be a problem.
Question is, how well do you think these would deal with the sediment/lees that it would encounter? I'd probably build a box around it to keep large debris out, like seeds and stems, but lees would get through.
Anyone have any better suggestions or see anything wrong with my plan?
Adding supply line was easy, but there is no drain in the cellar. So I've just got a bucket under the sink and when it gets close to full I go dump it in laundry room. I'd like to get something a bit more permanent setup.
Ideally I would just have it drain via gravity but being a cellar, walls are all concrete. So drilling a 2" hole into the next room (furnace room) would be a pain, plus it's a good 30' to the nearest drain I could tie in to. Not sure there would be sufficient drop over that length for gravity to do it's thing. I could break up the floor in the cellar to tie into the main drain line, but thats way more involved than I want to get. Cellar is just like 25' x 5', and wine making area is just 10x5.
I was thinking of putting a small pump, like an aquarium pump or bilge pump, in the bottom of the bucket, something with a 1/2" or 3/4" output. Those typically do 300-400 gallons per hour, plenty for just occasionally draining the bucket. I'd drill a small 1" hole in cellar wall, and run some PEX over to the bathroom and tie it into that drain. Being pumped, the lack of slope shouldn't be a problem.
Question is, how well do you think these would deal with the sediment/lees that it would encounter? I'd probably build a box around it to keep large debris out, like seeds and stems, but lees would get through.
Anyone have any better suggestions or see anything wrong with my plan?