I have a 2 bay car wash in the Ottawa Valley region and it gets darn cold here. This week we are expecting -18 degree Celsius temperature. There is a Dixmor Weepmizer connected, however, when the temperatures are low, I am wasting a lot of water. Being on city water, my bills are pretty steep for the water usage. Someone suggested me a "reclaim" system to capture the weep water and recirculate it. However, given the small size of my equipment room, I am skeptical about introducing the water system.
I would like to ask your advice of using a manual blowout system for the days or nights when it is too cold to have the wash open. The current weepmizer system design is as follows:
Valves 1 and 2 feed the high pressure gun with weep water
Valve 3 feeds the 2 foam brushes through a manifold with weep water
4 is the solenoid valve for the weepmizer
5 is the check valve from the weepmizer
I was thinking of putting in a check valve between 2 and 3 and introduce compressed air and then flush the system with anti-freeze. By turning the weepmizer off, the solenoid valve will be open. I can then close valve 5 ensuring that there is no backflow and proceed to open valves 1, 2 and 3 individually and complete the blowout cycle. In your valued opinion does this plan make any sense?
Will a utility pump work to introduce the anti-freeze to the system? And would 40 ~ 50 psi be a good pressure to blowout the system?
I would like to ask your advice of using a manual blowout system for the days or nights when it is too cold to have the wash open. The current weepmizer system design is as follows:
Valves 1 and 2 feed the high pressure gun with weep water
Valve 3 feeds the 2 foam brushes through a manifold with weep water
4 is the solenoid valve for the weepmizer
5 is the check valve from the weepmizer
I was thinking of putting in a check valve between 2 and 3 and introduce compressed air and then flush the system with anti-freeze. By turning the weepmizer off, the solenoid valve will be open. I can then close valve 5 ensuring that there is no backflow and proceed to open valves 1, 2 and 3 individually and complete the blowout cycle. In your valued opinion does this plan make any sense?
Will a utility pump work to introduce the anti-freeze to the system? And would 40 ~ 50 psi be a good pressure to blowout the system?
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