U.S. Waterproofing | Sump Pump vs. Ejector Pump: What’s the…

Sump Pump vs. Ejec­tor Pump: What’s the Difference?

Aug 4, 2013 • By Matthew Stock.

Sump Ejector Pump

In most parts of the coun­try, home­own­ers are used to hav­ing a sump pump in the base­ment. They’ve been around a while (as many homes with the old pedestal-style pump will prove) and they play an impor­tant role in keep­ing a base­ment dry.

In many homes, though, par­tic­u­lar­ly in those with fin­ished base­ments, there is often what appears to be a sec­ond sump pump, often locat­ed near the wash­er and dry­er. It is often iden­ti­cal, or at least very sim­i­lar, to the oth­er sump pump and some home­own­ers are per­plexed as to why it’s there and what it does.

In fact, this sec­ond pump is usu­al­ly an ejec­tor pump and, although it per­forms the same basic func­tion as a sump pump in remov­ing water from the base­ment, the source and des­ti­na­tion of that water are far different.

So, What’s the Dif­fer­ence between a Sump Pump and an Ejec­tor Pump?

Sump pumps and ejec­tor pumps are both impor­tant parts of a home’s water man­age­ment sys­tem and a mal­func­tion of either can cre­ate a destruc­tive mess.

Sump Pumps

sump pump is a small, often sub­mersible, water pump that is locat­ed in the base­ment in a sump basin, a cylin­dri­cal con­tain­er at least two feet deep that is set into the floor. Typ­i­cal­ly, there will be two inlets in a sump basin that con­nect to either end of a drain tile sys­tem, either inte­ri­or or exte­ri­or. Water col­lect­ed by the drain tile flows to the sump basin and accu­mu­lates there until the lev­el ris­es high enough to trig­ger the sump pump’s float switch.

The water that col­lects in the sump basin is ground water, that is, water from the soil sur­round­ing the home’s foun­da­tion and is typ­i­cal­ly clear and cold. When the sump pump is acti­vat­ed, it pumps the water out of the base­ment through a dis­charge pipe and deliv­ers it out onto the lawn, into a munic­i­pal storm sew­er or a dis­per­sal device like a bub­bler pot or dry well.

If a sump pump fails or is over­whelmed, the base­ment will flood; they typ­i­cal­ly have bat­tery back-up pump sys­tems alongside.

Ejec­tor Pumps

An ejec­tor pump often looks just like a sump pump and is also installed in a basin in the floor. Rather than col­lect­ing ground water from drain tile, the ejec­tor pump’s basin will accu­mu­late water from floor drains, grey water” from a wash­ing machine and/​or slop sink” or, when the home has a below-grade bath­room, waste water.

An ejec­tor pump that process­es waste water will have a sealed lid on its basin and a vent pipe to han­dle sew­er gas­es. A pump that han­dles only gray water and/​or water from floor drains will prob­a­bly have a lid but no vent. In either case, the dis­charge pipe from an ejec­tor pump will always be con­nect­ed to a san­i­tary sew­er line just like the home’s plumb­ing fix­tures. A fail­ure of an ejec­tor pump will cre­ate some flood­ing, although the vol­ume of water is gen­er­al­ly small­er; the pres­ence of raw sewage or oth­er dirty water may cre­ate a health haz­ard and the affect­ed area must be cleaned and disinfected.

If the indi­ca­tors aren’t clear, a home­own­er can iden­ti­fy an ejec­tor pump by flush­ing a base­ment toi­let or run­ning water in a sink. Either should trig­ger the pump.

One last dif­fer­ence: Ejec­tor pumps are often installed by plumbers who typ­i­cal­ly offer a lim­it­ed selec­tion and depend on repeat vis­its for main­te­nance. Sump pumps are usu­al­ly installed by base­ment water­proof­ing con­trac­tors who offer a wider range of longer-life pumps and who are experts at remov­ing water from a base­ment, regard­less of its source and can offer home­own­ers more option for ejec­tor pumps as well.

So, no mat­ter if your home has one or two pumps in the base­ment, a pro­fes­sion­al base­ment water­proof­ing con­trac­tor should be your go-to” for instal­la­tion, main­te­nance or repair. At U.S. Water­proof­ing, we’ve installed thou­sands of high-qual­i­ty sump pumps since our found­ing in 1957 so why not ask for our free advice?

Tags: sump pump vs. ejector pump, sump pump or ejector pump

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