battery water pump

darkarms

Well-Known Member
Heya fellas i was wondering if anyone happens to know if i could use a car battery (or something else) and a water pump with a long hose to water my girls this year ....... if so how would i set it up? what pump would i have to buy ? what other materials would i need ?

I seen this on a video ..... either a news report or documentary of growers having ab attery pump and it worked well ..... aparently
 

sudshead

Well-Known Member
this is what you need

car battery
rv pump
garden timer valve

battery attaches to rv pump
rv pump has hose go to water source
rv pump has outlet go to garden timer

when the garden timer opens (its like you turned on the faucet in an rv) the pump starts pumping

with a small solar trickle charger you never need to visit your grow to water
 

Blitzedgrowkid08

Well-Known Member
this is what you need

car battery
rv pump
garden timer valve

battery attaches to rv pump
rv pump has hose go to water source
rv pump has outlet go to garden timer

when the garden timer opens (its like you turned on the faucet in an rv) the pump starts pumping

with a small solar trickle charger you never need to visit your grow to water
I really like this idea could you elaborate more on the solar recharging process(hook up/how it works) and where to purchase one
 

getawaymountain

Well-Known Member
tractor supply has a nice compact solar systems that are good for a big 12 volt batteries for under 100 bucks ready to use comes with regulater , wiring and panel take out of box hook to battery and point panel toward sky- done deal lol... we use them at every spot in the bush so not to carry batteries around all the time they work great and we pump water a long ways to fill our holding tarps we have at the gardens
 

getawaymountain

Well-Known Member
we use a rule 4000 gallon a hr. marine 12 volt pump with the outlet reduced down to garden hose 300 ft long then we leapfrog water from tarp to tarp until we get where we want it
 

bird mcbride

Well-Known Member
I have to use two pumps when I'm using the water from my swamp. So if one pump won't cut it use two, or more. Use semi-tractor batteries or something just as good or better. I have gathered enough tossed cut-offs from the hydro company to run about 1/2 mile of cable(the type they run into your home). At first I buried it and the hose with just leaves and brush. Now it's completely blanketed in dead debree from the trees loosing thier leaves every year. I'm using one inch black plastic hose. If like in my case, the 200' role isn't long enough do not join it using standard BS because these joiners will act as restrictors and will reduce the distance the pump can pump. I use a piece(about 8"-10") of the next size up BP pipe. I wrap it in plastic and tape(with electrical tape) it one way then the other to secure the joint.
 

kinddiesel

Well-Known Member
im only going to give info on the batter you need to buy. because that's what I know. you need to buy a (deep cycle ) battery. they are better suited for your needs. it can be discharged 100 % and recharged up to 100 times. and the deep cycle battery will run that pump a lot longer. a car battery is a horrible battery for that pump. it will discharge very fast. car battery cant be recharged after it totally deal more then a few times this will rune it. a deep cycle puts out the same power so it will run that pump until its totally dead at the same speed. a car battery will start getting slower and slower. ay ways I gave advice on what I know. hope it helps.
 

getawaymountain

Well-Known Member
003.jpghose battery stream.jpg7,6,09 tarpwell.jpghere's the pump we use and the tarps we set up all over the place for water supply when the swamps dry up in august till harvest time
 

MEANGREEN69

Well-Known Member
thanks for the posting those pictures Getawaymountain. but how much "head" can a pump like that handle? I'm assuming you don't use gas powered pumps because of stealth?
 

getawaymountain

Well-Known Member
thanks for the posting those pictures Getawaymountain. but how much "head" can a pump like that handle? I'm assuming you don't use gas powered pumps because of stealth?
it will pump small inclines over a couple hundred feet at a time and runs like a house faucet does to fill my tarps i put at each spot for water i reduce it down to garden size hose and it will fill a 5 gallon bucket in 2 -3 minutes . i just let it run while i work the plants in the spot i am pumpimg water to and yes really stealthy
 

NorthernMan

Member
im only going to give info on the batter you need to buy. because that's what I know. you need to buy a (deep cycle ) battery. they are better suited for your needs. it can be discharged 100 % and recharged up to 100 times. and the deep cycle battery will run that pump a lot longer. a car battery is a horrible battery for that pump. it will discharge very fast. car battery cant be recharged after it totally deal more then a few times this will rune it. a deep cycle puts out the same power so it will run that pump until its totally dead at the same speed. a car battery will start getting slower and slower. ay ways I gave advice on what I know. hope it helps.
Awesome info, I wouldn't have known not to use a car battery, thanks for that tip!!!
 

lilroach

Well-Known Member
There are some high-capacity bilge pumps out there....a bit pricey if you have to buy a bunch of 'em.
 

MEANGREEN69

Well-Known Member
it will pump small inclines over a couple hundred feet at a time and runs like a house faucet does to fill my tarps i put at each spot for water i reduce it down to garden size hose and it will fill a 5 gallon bucket in 2 -3 minutes . i just let it run while i work the plants in the spot i am pumpimg water to and yes really stealthy

thanks for the info.
 
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