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Did some searching on the forums and apparently the best practice is a float valve in a reservoir.
First you connect a 1/4 line to the cold water supply, from there the 1/4 in. line runs to the solenoid valve then to the misters.Can you explain the solenoid valve to me? Maybe an Amazon link? How would I hook it up?
And keep in mind that without a backflow preventer with that valve, it does not conform to code and you may backfeed contaminants in to your drinking water as well as the city water supply. So you too as well as your neighbors can enjoy water from your chameleons drip system.
First you connect a 1/4 line to the cold water supply, from there the 1/4 in. line runs to the solenoid valve then to the misters.
The solenoid valve is powered by a light timer, when power is applied, the valve opens. To temper the water you tie into both the cold and hot with a Y or Tee fitting with a needle valve on each to control the temperature of the water
Plumbing is Murphys(Murphy's law) first love.
Yup ,yup, and this Murphy's law might actually solve my every 3 hours with 2 buckets of misting water while I planning my long vacation without divorcing my chameleon......can you also advice a feeding system.....something like automatic feeder device perfectly with space divider,so I can even take a longer vacation
Thats true but it's very unlikely for a water outage to make your plumbing back flow unless a valve is open at the time of the outage.
What kind of drainage do you have on your cage?
I agree, I just know it violates code. As do sprinkler parts being installed inside a dwellings plumbing system. As long as you own your dwelling and are willing to accept the consequences of flooding it, I guess that works. Insurance won't cover it.
I can't count how many times a sprinkler valve has stick in the open position, or failed to fully close because of debris. If you don't account for drainage for a basically unlimited supply of water into your dwelling, the results could be disastrous.
Like, Todnedo, I do this type of stuff too, but it is important to know the risks so you can decide to do it or not. If I were a renter, I would not chance it because if something goes wrong, you will be sued.
Some city water will have a lot of impuritys that will clog misters but as wasteful as R.O. units are you will save money by buying extra mister heads, change them out and clean them.... when using more than 2 gallons of R.O. water a day for mistingI would not connect it to a city water line, the reason is that from all the salts and minerals the water has, it will clogged up your sprinklers, the best thing to do is
Hook up a reverse osmosis system to city water, hook up the 1/4 line that contains the good water coming out of R/O (reverse osmosis) to a float valve that is inside a 5 gallon reservoir, from the reservoir you hook up your mistking pump with a tubing connector almost all the way down to the bottom, and from the pump you send your tubing up to the sprinklers
Your R/O water will never clog your sprinklers and you will be all set for a continous purified water supply......
Sana