Racf
August 23rd 03, 01:35 PM
"Mark Henry" > wrote in message
om...
> Damaclese wrote:
>
> > all my water has to be brought up and down 2 flights of stairs so
common
> > suction gravell cleaners dont work.
>
> Damaclese,
>
> I had a similar problem as yours and got sick of lugging the buckets
> down the stairs to the nearest sink. A eventually bought me a 100'
long
> garden hose (about $15 USD) and tied it off to the tank stand and
threw
> it out the window. The output hose from the gravel vacuum went into
the
> garden hose, then I duct-taped the two together to prevent overflow.
>
> During the summer I drain everything into the flower garden (awesome
> fertilizer!), in the winter I run the hose down the stairs and into
the
> bathtub (which then gets a good scrubbing).
>
> To fill the tank, I went to a water bed store and bought a converter
for
> the tap in my kitchen sink. It allows a hose to screw on to the tap so
> you can fill a water bed. Now, it's two floors straight up, but I've
got
> enough water pressure in the building to fill a 55gal tank in no
time -
> and now I don't have to lug water up-and-down the stairs!
>
> mark h
>
I bet his tank is downstairs and sink and faucet are upstairs.
om...
> Damaclese wrote:
>
> > all my water has to be brought up and down 2 flights of stairs so
common
> > suction gravell cleaners dont work.
>
> Damaclese,
>
> I had a similar problem as yours and got sick of lugging the buckets
> down the stairs to the nearest sink. A eventually bought me a 100'
long
> garden hose (about $15 USD) and tied it off to the tank stand and
threw
> it out the window. The output hose from the gravel vacuum went into
the
> garden hose, then I duct-taped the two together to prevent overflow.
>
> During the summer I drain everything into the flower garden (awesome
> fertilizer!), in the winter I run the hose down the stairs and into
the
> bathtub (which then gets a good scrubbing).
>
> To fill the tank, I went to a water bed store and bought a converter
for
> the tap in my kitchen sink. It allows a hose to screw on to the tap so
> you can fill a water bed. Now, it's two floors straight up, but I've
got
> enough water pressure in the building to fill a 55gal tank in no
time -
> and now I don't have to lug water up-and-down the stairs!
>
> mark h
>
I bet his tank is downstairs and sink and faucet are upstairs.