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SEPTIC SYSTEMS HOME
HOME BUYERS GUIDE to SEPTIC SYSTEMS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS ONLINE BOOK
SEPTIC TANK SIZE
SEPTIC TANK TEES
SEPTIC & GREYWATER FILTERS
SEPTIC CLEARANCES
SEPTIC TANK PUMPING SCHEDULE
WHEN NOT TO PUMP A SEPTIC TANK
TANK PUMPING PROCEDURE
  Safety Warnings
  When to Pump
  Find the Septic Tank
  How to Open Septic Tanks
  Open the Septic Tank
  Inspect Before Pumping
  Pumper Truck Operation
  Pumping the Septic Tank
  Inspect During Pumping
  Washing Septic Tank Sides/Bottom
  Inspect After Pumping
  Close the Septic Tank
  Record Septic Tank Location
  Advising Owners
TANK INSPECTION PROCEDURE
SEPTIC FIELD INSPECTION
SEPTIC TREATMENTS
SEPTIC CONSULTANTS
SEPTIC SYSTEM DESIGN BASICS
SEPTIC DESIGN ALTERNATIVES
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Photo of septic tank sludge and
scum layer being broken up prior to septic tank cleanout.

What to Check During Septic Tank Pumping
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  • How to pump out / clean a septic tank, step by step photo-illustrated guide
  • Before starting, some safety warnings for septic pumpers and homeowners
  • When to pump, how to find the septic tank, inspect before opening the tank; removing the tank cover
  • How the pumper truck or vacuum truck is operated
  • Tank inspection before pumping; Actually pumping out the septic tank;
  • Septic Tank inspections while tank pumping
  • Washing the septic tank after pumping, inspecting the tank after pumping
  • Closing the septic tank, recording the septic tank location, advising homeowners
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Key information about the drainfield status can be discovered during the actual time that the septic tank is being pumped. We explain this here. This document provides a step by step, photo-illustrated guide to opening, pumping, and inspecting septic tanks, how a conventional septic tank is located, opened, pumped out, cleaned, and inspected. This guideline is intended for septic pumping tank truck operators and as general information for homeowners or septic service companies concerned with septic system care. The steps in servicing a septic tank are listed below, accompanied by photographs that show each of the critical steps in pumping, cleaning, and inspecting a septic tank. Citation of this article by reference to this website and brief quotation for the sole purpose of review are permitted. Use of this information at other websites, in books or pamphlets for sale is reserved to the author. Technical reviewers are welcome and are listed at "References." This is a chapter of Inspecting, Testing, & Maintaining Residential Septic Systems an online book on septic systems. © Copyright 2008 Daniel Friedman, All Rights Reserved. Information Accuracy & Bias Pledge is at below-left. Use the links at page left to navigate this document or to go to Other Website Topics. Green links at left show where you are in our document & website.

A Photographic Guide to Pumping a Septic Tank

Inspection Points During Septic Tank Pumping

PHOTO of an septic tank during tank pumping.

During Septic Tank Pumping:

  • Noise of drainfield back-flow: if the septic tank pumper observes (or hears) septic effluent flowing back into the septic tank from the tank outlet pipe this is a sure indication that the drainfield or soil absorption system is waterlogged, and indicates a system failure needing further investigation. That's because normally effluent flows from the septic tank outlet towards the drainfield. If effluent is flowing backwards, it means there is standing water in the drainfield and it is flooded and not working. The drainfield could be flooded by local surface runoff, groundwater, or because the leach field no longer is passing effluent out rapidly enough.
  • When to listen: from the beginning of the pump-down cycle to the end, but a clever pumper truck operator might stop the truck pumping (if noise is too close to the tank) when the effluent in the septic tank is just below the level of the outlet line leaving the tank. This is when we would first hear and most-likely hear back-flow from the drainfield. If we wait until the whole tank is empty, we may have waited too long, and the water or effluent that was sitting in the drainfield may have already emptied itself into the septic tank (and been pumped out to the truck).
  • The photo shows a concrete septic tank during pumping. As the effluent level dropped below that of the bottom of the tank baffles, we stopped pumping briefly to listen for the sound of effluent flowing back into the tank from its outlet.

    Septic tank pumping is best performed from an access cover at the center of the tank if one is provided (as in this photo). This gives best access to the pumper to clean sludge and debris from all areas of the tank bottom.


SEPTIC SYSTEMS HOME
HOME BUYERS GUIDE to SEPTIC SYSTEMS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS ONLINE BOOK
SEPTIC TANK SIZE
SEPTIC TANK TEES
SEPTIC & GREYWATER FILTERS
SEPTIC CLEARANCES
SEPTIC TANK PUMPING SCHEDULE
WHEN NOT TO PUMP A SEPTIC TANK
TANK PUMPING PROCEDURE
  Safety Warnings
  When to Pump
  Find the Septic Tank
  How to Open Septic Tanks
  Open the Septic Tank
  Inspect Before Pumping
  Pumper Truck Operation
  Pumping the Septic Tank
  Inspect During Pumping
  Washing Septic Tank Sides/Bottom
  Inspect After Pumping
  Close the Septic Tank
  Record Septic Tank Location
  Advising Owners
TANK INSPECTION PROCEDURE
SEPTIC FIELD INSPECTION
SEPTIC TREATMENTS
SEPTIC CONSULTANTS
SEPTIC SYSTEM DESIGN BASICS
SEPTIC DESIGN ALTERNATIVES
List Your Service/Product
Website en espanol
Website en Francais
Website en Portugese
More Information

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The Septic Systems Online Book - Where Are We?

Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website.

Technical Reviewers

Particular thanks are due to experts and also consumers who read these articles and suggest corrections, changes, and additions to the material.

  • Daniel Friedman - principal author
  • Special thanks to M & O Sanitation, Dutchess County NY (845) 471-0308 for permitting us to photograph steps during septic system service at our demonstration property.
  • Technical reviewers are invited to comment or ask questions - contact us

Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website.

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SEPTIC SYSTEMS HOME
SEPTIC INFO ARTICLES
HOME BUYERSGUIDE
SEPTIC SYSTEMS ONLINE BOOK
SEPTIC PUMPING REPAIR
SEPTIC TREATMENTS
SEPTIC CONSULTANTS
SEPTIC AUTHORITIES
BOOKS REFS CODES
SEPTIC SYSTEM DESIGN BASICS
DESIGN ALTERNATIVES
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More Information on Septic System Diagnosis, Maintenance, & Repair



Pennsylvania State Fact Sheets relating to domestic wastewater treatment systems include
  • Pennsylvania State Wastewater Treatment Fact Sheet SW-161, Septic System Failure: Diagnosis and Treatment
  • Pennsylvania State Wastewater Treatment Fact Sheet SW-162, The Soil Media and the Percolation Test
  • Pennsylvania State Wastewater Treatment Fact Sheet SW-l64, Mound Systems for Wastewater Treatment
  • Pennsylvania State Wastewater Treatment Fact Sheet SW-165, Septic Tank-Soil Absorption Systems
  • Document Sources used for this web page include but are not limited to: Agricultural Fact Sheet #SW-161 "Septic Tank Pumping," by Paul D. Robillard and Kelli S. Martin. Penn State College of Agriculture - Cooperative Extension, edited and annotated by Dan Friedman (Thanks: to Bob Mackey for proofreading the original source material.)
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    04/07/2008 - 12/21/2006 www.inspect-ny.com/septic/SepticTankWhilePump.htm © Copyright 2008 Daniel Friedman - all rights reserved