The caustic (salty) backflow from a water filtration system I had installed was, unbeknownst to me at the time, undirected, just a pipe exiting the back of my home.
My home is on a hill, and the backflow killed a large swath of my lawn and "burned" a bush separating my property from the neighbor.
I asked the filter guy about it, and he said they don't get involved with where it goes. They usually just find a place under a deck (which I don't have). He did tell me that the flow rate is typically under 2.5 gal/min, with a maximum backflow of about 30 gal total. The regeneration causing the backflow occurs about 3 or 4 times per week.
So, I've come out to this forum to see if anyone has any details they might share about taking care of this. Can I just dig a trench to a hole, connect a PVC pipe from the backflow pipe to the hole through the trench, fill the trench and hole with gravel, and resod the top? Is this what's called a "French drain"? How deep/wide should the trench and hole be? At what grade?
Drainage for water softener backflow?
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Things might be different in Massachussetts, but here in Europe you'd have what we call "leach field" to distribute the iffy water over a larger area and thereby limit its potential for damage.
You can see some very basic info on leach fields here
You can see some very basic info on leach fields here
Site Agent - Pavingexpert
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