As of right now i don't have a water supply so i cant use one.
Here is a brochure you can look at really simple but good info.
My Friend made it up a long time ago used all over the world now. He travel around now sharing in 3rd world countries.
The attachment is kinda weired because it is supposed to be printed. Read cover on 1st attachment then second attachment then back to first sorry for inconvenience
Yup!!! Thank God for our ram pump!! We bought ours from a company in Texas. The man was very helpful getting ours set up. We went with a 1" pump, the cheapest they made to see if we had adequate flow and fall. now that pump raises water 600' to our camp(140" vertical!) We were given an estimate of $20,000 for a drilled well which is not an option right now but we wanted to be able to enjoy our new piece of earth now... when there is a will there is away
This farm http://www.bugtusslefarm.com/ uses a ram pump for all farm needs. The pump was entirely built by the farmer using plumbing supplies, and is similar to the diagrams above.
There are perrenial streams with about 18 ft of usable head. The pump handles about 320 gallons per day, lifting water up to storage tanks over 100 ft up and 1/2 a mile away.
I can remember my uncle (40+ years ago) using one to pump water up a 200' hill, from a creek, to water his large beef cow herd...
I never knew how it worked...
Also, we might want to use one on our farm, where we have water, and do not have electrical power...
I spent some time researching and have created a blog on the subject: "Water Pumps Without Electricity or Fuel" - Hydraulic Water Ram Pumps and Others...
Does anyone have a plan for a serious ram pump that will lift water a serious distance? The only one that I have been able to find on the net was one that failed against any serious height. Thanks.
Ok, so I am cheap frugal & lazy prefer to work smartly, and finding properties on a budget with an all weather water supply is no simple task... That combination has led me to searching for self-priming/self-starting ram pumps. I know that Rife makes one... so they are theoretically possible (and more importantly, real world possible). At the moment I am just in the experimental stage, so I am looking for a DIY option.
So that brings me to it: Does anyone know of a DIY, self-priming/self-starting ram pump designs?
I am imagining a rain collection system partially from a home that automatically pumps the water up to a "water tower" to pressure the same home's fresh water supply. I know there are many other facets to the problem... such as limitations of volume and purification concerns... but my focus is on the pump (or defeating gravity) at the moment.
Good choices, Monte. That last video is from one of my favorite youtubers. Also, check out the ones Wranglerstar did on his land. He shows how he made it, why it works, how the trenches and catches work, etc. if you can not find them, let me know and I can dig up the links.
Mindy
Monte Hines wrote:Subject interests me for several reasons:
I can remember my uncle (40+ years ago) using one to pump water up a 200' hill, from a creek, to water his large beef cow herd...
I never knew how it worked...
Also, we might want to use one on our farm, where we have water, and do not have electrical power...
I spent some time researching and have created a blog on the subject: "Water Pumps Without Electricity or Fuel" - Hydraulic Water Ram Pumps and Others...
Glenn Underhill wrote:Monte linked to a youtube video by engineer775. I don't think Monte picked that one randomly. Engineer775 has some of the best videos on ram pumps.
I would like to extend that by saying, in my humble opinion, that engineer775 is a genius and is well worth watching and learning from on most subjects. He even shows what he has done on his own property for rain catchment, how he made a truck run off wood, and many more cleaver things. When he talks, I take notes.
Anyone know if a tensegritive structure could be used to make a pump that accomplished the same function? tensegritive=discontinuous compressed pieces held together by continuous tensile bands.
I imagine just a big bladder or animal-heart-like thing throbbing, a check valve on the outflow pipe, and a little hole with check valve in the top that squirts water through each time the thing throbs. Ram pumps are really cool, but I just wonder if there's any even more elegant solution to this that doesn't need as much strong metal to fight the water, that uses tensile strength instead of only compressive.
Post by:autobot
I'm gonna make him a tiny ad he can't refuse!
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