Fitting a T33 Rainwater Diverter and Filter for Water Butts
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Fitting a T33 Rainwater Diverter and Filter for Water Butts
There is a fine product out there called a Raintec T33 Rainwater Filter, made by www.regen-tec.de. It filters the water coming out of your downpipe so that only clean rainwater enters your water butt; leaves and other debris continue down the pipe as normal.
Trouble is the English instructions included are the direst I have ever seen. Sample:
“3. Instll Filter choose reduction according to downpipe diameter not required
So here's my alternative guide.
You'll also find this product variously called Regenwasser-Fallrohrfilter T 33 , Regenfilter, RF-T33, Regenwachter, and so on. As of April 2010, it's listed on amazon.de.
Caveats
Blurb
The T33 Downpipe Rain Filter Unit is suitable for water butts or tanks up to 1000 litres, and a roof area of 80 m² (there is another version, the T50, for roof areas of 100 m²). It filters the water through a 0.1mm gauge stainless steel screen, so that only clean rainwater enters the butt, while leaves and other debris continue down the pipe as normal.
The T33 is available in brown or silver, and is suitable for round downpipes measuring 63mm, 68mm, 80mm or 100mm, and for square downpipes measuring 61mm or 65mm. A long hose is included so you can site your waterbutt further from the downpipe if you want to.
The filter unit allows 90% of the water to pass to the butt, ensuring quick filling even with only light rainfall.
Bits and Pieces
Siting Your Water Butt
When the first water butt in the chain is full, water will start to flow into the second water butt. More butts can be added to the chain in exactly the same way. You’ll need a tap for each water butt in the chain.
Installing the T33 - Tools
- a spirit level
- a drill with a 32mm bit
- a saw and /or craft knife
- sandpaper or a sander
- determination
1. Preparing the Downpipe
2. Preparing the Bottom Section of the Filter Unit
Marry up the bottom half of the filter unit with the pipe (use the 20cm section you have cut out as a template).
Cut away as many of the plastic flanges and lugs as needed to allow the base of the bottom section to fit snugly into the pipe. Don’t cut away too much, or, once fitted, the filter unit will wobble about in the downpipe.
I cut the corners off mine, but I could probably have managed just sanding the corners down till they fitted. That way, it might have fitted more securely in the downpipe. Try it.
3. Fit the Hose to the Filter Unit Outlet
It is easier to fit the hose onto the outlet at this stage than once the filter unit is installed in the downpipe. Choose either the short or long hose, depending on the distance from downpipe to water butt.
4. Fit the Filter Screen
Push the filter screen down into the bottom section of the filter unit and check it is secure - it should clip in firmly.
5. Preparing the Top Section of the Filter Unit
Now repeat the bodging process for the lid of the top half of the filter unit.
6. Fit the Filter Unit Into the Downpipe
Push the lid onto the hanging down bit of the downpipe.
Push the bottom part of the filter unit as far as it will go into the sticking up bit of the downpipe.
Push the top part of the filter unit upwards onto the hanging down bit of downpipe.
Press the top part of the filter unit down onto the bottom part; slide the lid down on top of the top part.
If it wobbles about, you may need to fix the downpipe to the wall with another downpipe clip. Make sure the clip is at least 12cm above the top of the filter unit so that you can get inside it if needed.
(Apparently the rubber seal part can be fitted to the bottom edge of the downpipe. Why you would want to do that I’m not sure - and the makers aren’t saying.)
7. Preparing the Water Butt
8. Connect the Hose to the Butt
Now connect the hose from the bottom of the filter unit to the butt.
Odds and Sods 1
There’s still some bits left over including a wire clippy thing. I’m not sure what it’s for, but here’s a picture from the manufacturers’ website, www.regen-tec.de. It might give you a clue (it doesn’t me).
Odds and Sods 2
Maintenance
Oh Come On! It Can't Be That Bad!
The original instructions?
OK, Smartypants. If you can make sense of this:
“3. Instll Filter choose reduction according to downpipe diameter not required
reductions should be cut out with a sharp knife top fixpart of filter in the downpipe see Fig 3. 3.”
Or you could translate the German instructions (another pdf). I only did a year of German at school, but that was enough to tell me that these instructions are almost as little use as the 'English' ones.
And Finally...
If the instructions are so dire, why not contact the people who sold you the filter and get them to supply proper ones?
Great idea. Or so I thought.
If it amuses you, you can read the text of my email correspondence. Here's a little scorecard:
My emails to them: 6
Theirs to me: 2
My phone calls to them: 1
Theirs to me: 0
My attempts to translate it: 2
Theirs: 0
My complaint about lack of service: 1
Their sarcastic reply telling me to bog off: 1
I hope this instructable will be of some use to somebody. Toodle-pip.