Is it safe to dump dirty water in the sink?

R

rcreations

Guest
Is it safe to dump dirty salt water (from water changes) in the sink? Or is it better to dump it outside?
 
R

rcreations

Guest
Reason I ask is because I read that it's bad for the pipes because of the salt buildup. But I would think the running water would wash that off.
 
i've been doing it through the sink for at least a month no problems...i usually let freshwater run down the pipes for a good minute i dont see why it would create problems
 

reefkprz

Active Member
most of your drain pipes are PVC in newer houses salt isnt going to hurt them at all. if you still have the old cast Iron piping it will accellerate corrosion.
 

michaeltx

Moderator
the only time its really not advised is when you are on a septic tank with a large amount of SW. it can kill the bacteria in the septic system.
Mike
 
R

rcreations

Guest
Thanks! Sounds like it's fairly safe to dump the dirty water in the sink.
 

digitydash

Active Member
I feed my palm trees with it and they love it
Your in Ohio though so I don't think you have any of them their.
 

cdangel0

Member
I ave found that water change water makes great lawn fertilizer. You just have to dilute it so the salt does not kill the grass.
 

geoj

Active Member
I have read that some algae can survive in the pipes long enough to make it through and become transplanted nuisances in the environment.
 

macchicks

New Member
Originally Posted by MichaelTX
http:///forum/post/2562275
the only time its really not advised is when you are on a septic tank with a large amount of SW. it can kill the bacteria in the septic system.
Mike
Thank you for this answer as it may not pertain to a lot of people but it does to me. I would never thought to ask.
 

socal57che

Active Member
I dump mine in the sewer drain. If you get close enough to the beach the drains are marked "CLEAN WATER ONLY - DRAINS INTO OCEAN" so I wonder about this practice. We are not allowed to have any (well a couple, but no lfs carries them) caulerpa so that isn't an issue, but I wonder how much life survives to make it back "home."
 

michaeltx

Moderator
another good point if you system goes into the ocean dont put it in the drains for that reason. alot of it will make it back to the ocean and even though its SW stuff its usually from a different region and that region may not be able to fight off the diseases or parasites or even be abl to eat algaes and stuff.
Mike
 

perfectdark

Active Member
Another note about septic sytems and this is geared more towards large quantities, but still may have an affect on smaller more frequent quantities too. But If your leech field is under anything you want to grow on top of it you may want to rethink putting SW in your system. The salt run off into the leech field can kill anything it saturates. And if your septic system is made out of concrete, salt eats away concrete, so that my have an effect too at some point.
 

srfisher17

Active Member
Bottle it and sell it at Wal-Mart; they sell millions of gallons of tap water; bottled by Coke & Pepsi. People will buy anything. (Label it "mineral enriched", salt mix is full of different minerals).
 

michaeltx

Moderator
yeah they do that was a big thing recently.
there was a talk show in the other day where people would only buy bottled water and swore that they could tell bottled to tap. they selceted 3 people and told them the water water peach flavor etc.. from france and germany and iceland and had them taste and rate the water. they all chose different ones as the best tasting and none said it was tap water. They had filled these bottles with tap water nothing more but because of marketing they thought it tasted different than it realy was.
kinda interesting how marketing can get you sucked into this is better than that.
Mike
 

srfisher17

Active Member
Isn't "Evian" one of the big "gourmet water" (what an oxymoron) brands? Evian spelled backwards is "naive", co-incidence?
 
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