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Master List of Septic System Types
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CESSPOOLS
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DOSING SYSTEMS PRESSURE
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EVAPORATION-TRANSPIRATION
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STEEP SLOPE DESIGNS WATERLESS LOW WATER TOILETS
SEPTIC INSPECTIONS
FAILURE CAUSES
INSPECTING TANKS
DRAINFIELD FAILURES
INSPECTING D-BOX
SEPTIC FIELD INSPECTION
SEPTIC DYE TESTS
FAILURE SPOTS
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Master List of Types of Septic Systems & Septic System Designs SepticAPedia ©
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- Types of Septic Systems, Alternative Septic System Designs, Master List & Descriptions of Kinds of Septic Systems
- Alternative septic system designs for problem sites
- Description of alternative septic systems, design criteria, product sources
- Aerobic septic systems, cesspools, dosing systems, drywells, evaporation/transpiration, gravelless, & graywater systems
- Media filter systems, septic filters, graywater filters, septic mound systems, raised bed septics, sand bed septic systems
- Residential sewage treatment systems, waterless or low-water toilet alternatives, product sources
Our site offers impartial, unbiased advice without conflicts of interest.
We will block advertisements which we discover or readers inform us are associated with bad business practices,
false-advertising, or junk science. Our contact info is at
inspect-ny.com/appointment.htm.
This document lists and describes all types of septic systems, including both conventional septic tank and drainfield systems and alternative septic system designs for difficult building sites such as wet sites, steep sites, rocky sites, limited space, bad soils with no percolation or sandy soils with too fast percolation, and other difficult site conditions.
We provide detailed articles about each alternative septic system design choice, listing its features, design requirements, inspection details, maintenance needs, product sources. We include links to septic design engineers, advanced septic system products and septic design books and building codes.
This document is a chapter provides in our Septic Systems Online Book.
Examples of advanced septic designs include aerobic septic systems, chemical, composting, incinerating & waterless toilets, evaporation-transpiration
(ET) septic systems, septic media filters, greywater systems, holding tank septic systems, mound septics, raised bed septics, pressure dosing septic systems, sand bed filters, peat beds, constructed wetlands,
wastewater lagoons, constructed wetlands, and septic disinfection systems.
Also see The Septic System Information Website.
Massachusetts Title 5 Licensed Septic System Inspector, & New York State H.I. License # 16000005303.
© 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.
ALTERNATIVE SEPTIC SYSTEM DESIGNS - Onsite Wastewater Treatment Methods for Difficult Sites
This document catalogs conventional and alternative septic system designs and provides links to detailed descriptions of these designs for onsite wastewater treatment. "Septic System Alternative Designs" refers to any onsite
wastewater disposal method other than the widely used conventional septic tank and leach field. In the U.S. most states require that an "alternative septic system" be designed by a professional and submitted to the local health department for approval.
Master List of Septic System Types & Onsite Wastewater Treatment Alternative Designs
Each of the links below presents a document with more in-depth information about each of these alternative septic system designs.
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Aerobic Treatment Septic Systems:
in residential use, ATUs are pre-packaged septic treatment systems which are in essence a mini-wastewater
treatment plant for home use. Waste is fed into a "trash tank" (similar to a septic tank); effluent moves
to a clarifier. Air (oxygen) is pumped through the system to provide oxidation and waste treatment using a variety
of designs.
Aerobic treatment units are used at sites where a conventional drain field system cannot be employed, and
are capable of successful wastewater treatment of septage on difficult or "impossible" residential sites.
Also see
Aerobic Septic System Disinfection - Use of calcium hypochlorite tablets for aerobic septic systems.
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- Chemical Toilets: use a
chemically treated reservoir located directly below the toilet seat. The chemicals reduce odors and perform partial (incomplete) disinfection of the waste.
Chemical toilets have limited storage capacity and must be pumped and periodically cleaned by a septic company. Similar to simple chemical toilets but more sophisticated in design are recirculating toilets which
separate the waste from the chemical and then re circulate the fluid through the toilet tank.
- Composting Toilets: may be used where the water supply is limited or not available at all, or where a building owner for other reasons wishes to conserve water use. Other wastewater treatment will still be required for handling graywater from sinks and showers.
- Disinfection Septic Systems: use chlorination
or ultraviolet light (UV) to disinfect wastewater effluent before it is discharged to the environment.
- Dosing Systems, Pressure or Gravity: Dosing systems permit the septic system drain field to rest between effluent doses and, depending on design, may alternate use of drainfield sections. Two broad types
of dosing systems are Gravity-Dosing (effluent flows from an effluent tank to the absorption system by gravity) or Pressure-Dosing (effluent is pumped from a dosing chamber to the absorption field).
See Gravity Dosing Septic Systems and Pressure-dosed Drainfield Septic Systems for details.
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Drip Dispersal septic tank effluent systems - (Jantrania/Gross wastewater system type III or if treated
to level 2 or better effluent, Jantrania/Gross wastewater system type VII)
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- Evaporation-Transpiration (ET) Septic Systems: and Evapo-Transpiration Absorption Septic Systems (ETA) dispose of septic effluent from the septic tank by providing
a surface area intended to allow the effluent to evaporate. ET systems depend entirely on evaporation while ETA systems make use of both evaporation and (limited) soil absorption of septic effluent.
(Jantrania/Gross wastewater system type IX if effluent is treated to level 2 or better). ET beds may be used with or without intermediate storage tanks and with or without effluent recycling systems.
- Filter bed effluent treatment systems (if treated to level 2 effluent or better, Jantrania/Gross wastewater system type VIII) - see various filter media types listed here such as sand beds, fabric filters, etc.
Filter beds may be
Mound Systems or Raised Bed septic systems,
Media Filter septic systems, septic systems or Sand-Bed filter septic systems.
Readers should distinguish between types of septic filter beds (listed above) and other septic filter products such as
in-tank septic filters.
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SEPTIC SYSTEMS HOME
SEPTIC INFO ARTICLES
Info for Home Buyers or Owners
Septic System Design
Septic Inspection Testing
Septic Maintenance Repair
HOME BUYERS GUIDE to SEPTIC SYSTEMS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS ONLINE BOOK
INTRODUCTION
SAFETY WARNINGS
SEPTIC SYSTEM DESIGN BASICS
PERC TESTS
SEPTIC TANK SIZE
SEPTIC TANK DEPTH
SEPTIC TANK TEES
FIELD SIZE
FIELD SHAPE
SEPTIC CLEARANCES
SEPTIC TANK PUMPING FREQUENCY
SEPTIC TANK PUMPING PROCEDURE
SEPTIC PUMPING REPAIR
SEPTIC TREATMENTS
STEEP SLOPE DESIGNS
ALTERNATIVE DESIGNS
Wastewater Treatment Levels
Wastewater Dispersal Methods
Master List of Septic System Types
AEROBIC SYSTEMS
CESSPOOLS
DOSING SYSTEMS GRAVITY/SIPHON
DOSING SYSTEMS PRESSURE
DRYWELLS
EVAPORATION-TRANSPIRATION
GRAVELLESS SYSTEMS
GREYWATER SYSTEMS
LAGOON SYSTEMS
MEDIA FILTER SYSTEMS
SEPTIC & GREYWATER FILTERS
MOUND SYSTEMS
RAISED BED SYSTEMS
SAND BED SYSTEMS
SEWAGE TREATMENT SYSTEMS
STEEP SLOPE DESIGNS WATERLESS LOW WATER TOILETS
SEPTIC INSPECTIONS
FAILURE CAUSES
INSPECTING TANKS
DRAINFIELD FAILURES
INSPECTING D-BOX
SEPTIC FIELD INSPECTION
SEPTIC DYE TESTS
FAILURE SPOTS
SEPTIC INSPECTION WORK SHEETS
ALTERNATIVE SEPTIC DESIGNERS
ALTERNATIVE SEPTIC PRODUCTS
DEFINITIONS
FAILURE LAWSUIT
FLOOD RESPONSE
SEPTIC REFERENCES
SEPTIC CONSULTANTS
SEPTIC AUTHORITIES
BOOKS REFS CODES
More Information
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Gravelless Septic Systems or "no rock" or "chamber" systems are not a complete alternative onsite wastewater design. Rather these are special products using geotextiles,
plastic chambers, or polystryene-wrapped perforated piping for effluent disposal into the soil, providing alternatives to conventional gravel-trench drainfields. In some cases these systems might permit design of an acceptable
effluent disposal system where a site too little space for a conventional drainfield, or where gravel is unavailable or is very expensive.
Some gravelless systems are accepted for use in areas with difficult or low-perc soils.
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- Greywater Septic Systems: refer to systems which reduce the liquid effluent load on a septic system by separating greywater (or graywater) from sinks and showers from
blackwater (black water) from toilets. When we inspect a home which uses a separate drywell to handle greywater we presume that the owners discovered that their septic system, or at least its leach field, was of limited capacity
or life.
- Gravity or Siphon Dosing Septic Systems:
move septic effluent from the septic tank to a final effluent treatment/dispersal/disposal system such as a drainfield by accumulating septic effluent in a dosing tank or chamber and
periodically sending the "dose" of effluent to the drainfield. To move effluent from the dosing tank to the drainfield a "gravity" dosing system uses a mechanical device such as a bell siphon system,
tipping tank, or float valve to determine when the dosing tank is full and ready to send effluent to the drainfield at intermittent frequencies or in "doses".
Effluent flows from the dosing tank to the drainfield by gravity.
Gravity/siphon dosing systems usually require a larger effluent holding tank or chamber than pressure dosing systems.
While some gravity dosing systems do not require electricity to operate, other "gravity" dosing system designs which place the dosing tank uphill and distant
from the septic tank, can require an effluent pump to move wastewater from the septic tank to the remote dosing chamber/tank.
Dosing systems permit the drain field to rest between doses and, depending on design, may alternate use of drainfield sections.
- "Gravity trench systems" is a generic term to describe distribution of septic effluent into a treatment and dispersal/disposal
system using perforated pipes buried in gravel-filled trenches dug into the soil. An example is the conventional septic drainfield but
gravity trenches can be used in other designs such as with gravity or pressure dosing systems. Gravity trench effluent systems may also be designed for "level 2 or better" effluent treatment (Jantrania/Gross wastewater system type V).
- Greenhouse treatment of septic effluent to level 3 or better (Jantrania/Gross wastewater system type XI). Greenhouses, like ET beds, may be used with or without storage tanks and effluent recycling systems. The system uses an
enclosed "greenhouse" constructed around plants and a mini "constructed wetlands" to treat effluent. Greenhouse wastewater treatment systems permit maintaining the treatment system at a higher temperature than otherwise might be possible, such
as in a cold or cool climate area.
Also see Constructed and Natural
Wetland Septic Systems
and also Lagoon Systems.
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SEPTIC SYSTEMS HOME
SEPTIC INFO ARTICLES
Info for Home Buyers or Owners
Septic System Design
Septic Inspection Testing
Septic Maintenance Repair
HOME BUYERS GUIDE to SEPTIC SYSTEMS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS ONLINE BOOK
INTRODUCTION
SAFETY WARNINGS
SEPTIC SYSTEM DESIGN BASICS
PERC TESTS
SEPTIC TANK SIZE
SEPTIC TANK DEPTH
SEPTIC TANK TEES
FIELD SIZE
FIELD SHAPE
SEPTIC CLEARANCES
SEPTIC TANK PUMPING FREQUENCY
SEPTIC TANK PUMPING PROCEDURE
SEPTIC PUMPING REPAIR
SEPTIC TREATMENTS
STEEP SLOPE DESIGNS
ALTERNATIVE DESIGNS
Wastewater Treatment Levels
Wastewater Dispersal Methods
Master List of Septic System Types
AEROBIC SYSTEMS
CESSPOOLS
DOSING SYSTEMS GRAVITY/SIPHON
DOSING SYSTEMS PRESSURE
DRYWELLS
EVAPORATION-TRANSPIRATION
GRAVELLESS SYSTEMS
GREYWATER SYSTEMS
LAGOON SYSTEMS
MEDIA FILTER SYSTEMS
SEPTIC & GREYWATER FILTERS
MOUND SYSTEMS
RAISED BED SYSTEMS
SAND BED SYSTEMS
SEWAGE TREATMENT SYSTEMS
STEEP SLOPE DESIGNS WATERLESS LOW WATER TOILETS
SEPTIC INSPECTIONS
FAILURE CAUSES
INSPECTING TANKS
DRAINFIELD FAILURES
INSPECTING D-BOX
SEPTIC FIELD INSPECTION
SEPTIC DYE TESTS
FAILURE SPOTS
SEPTIC INSPECTION WORK SHEETS
ALTERNATIVE SEPTIC DESIGNERS
ALTERNATIVE SEPTIC PRODUCTS
DEFINITIONS
FAILURE LAWSUIT
FLOOD RESPONSE
SEPTIC REFERENCES
SEPTIC CONSULTANTS
SEPTIC AUTHORITIES
BOOKS REFS CODES
More Information
InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map
Plumbing Water Septic
Accuracy & Bias Pledge
Contact Us
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- Holding Tank Septic Systems: use a sealed tank to hold household waste and wastewater until the tank can be pumped out by a septic pumping company. Most
jurisdictions do not permit septic holding tanks as a permanent wastewater handling method for full-time occupied residences, but holding tanks may be permitted during new home construction and in other special cases. In New York
State we've seen holding tank systems in use on small-lot properties located along the Hudson River. Generally such systems will not be acceptable for full time occupied residences as even a large tank of several thousand gallons will require
frequent and costly pumping and disposal.
- Incinerator Toilet Septic Systems: incinerating toilets use electricity or gas to burn the waste placed into these systems. Like chemical toilets and holding tanks they have
limited capacity, are used where water is not available or must be conserved, and they do not address the handling of remaining graywater from sinks and showers. My favorite of this type was the "Destroylet" incinerator toilet which
was electric/propane fueled and which is no longer on the market. Each flush resulted in a more than 10-minute burn cycle which produced a pretty smelly exhaust.
- Latrine or simple trench systems, useful in remote and impoverished areas to improve sanitation and thus the quality of drinking water and other special, extremely low-cost waste handling, wastewater treatment systems are ignored
by most modern texts on onsite wastewater treatment, excepting perhaps military manuals which address field toilets and sanitation for military operations. This topic needs considerably more attention as a step in assisting rural, poor
areas in developing nations. Articles, illustrations, and text contributions are wanted; additions to this special topic will be provided as they are developed
at this website. Inadequate disposal and treatment of human and animal waste in poor areas is a major cause of dysentery and often high infant and child mortality. Meanwhile see the helpful but
inadequate resource sketches at http://www.africanwater.org/ecosan_main.htm"the African Water Page and Ecological Sanitation" and http://peacecorps.mtu.edu/erda/links.htm a peace corps site on composting latrines
- Lagoon systems: also known as "pond systems" for onsite wastewater treatment are less often found in use for
single family residential wastewater treatment. A residential lagoon system may use a conventional septic tank, but effluent from the tank flows to a storage pond or lagoon for further treatment.
Lagoon systems require comparatively large land areas and are more likely
to be found therefore in rural areas or where a common wastewater treatment system has been designed to serve multiple dwellings. Also see Constructed Wetland Septic Systems
- Media Filter Septic Systems: use a conventional septic
tank followed by any of several methods to further filter and treat septic effluent before it is discharged to the soil, soil surface, or waterway. Treatment is by both actual filtration and ultimately by a biochemical process as the
filter "matures" and includes its own biomass. Both natural media filter septic systems (such as sand, gravel, or peat) and synthetic media filter septic systems (foam cubes, glass, slag) are used.
- Mound Septic Systems:
a wastewater absorption trench system which has been constructed using "suitable soil-fill material" which has been placed on top of the natural soil on a building lot. Mound systems are often confused with "raised systems" (see below)
but have different design requirements, are generally smaller in total size, and depend on the fill material for successful wastewater treatment. Also see "Raised Systems" below.
- Pressure-dosed Drainfield Septic Systems:
pressure dosing systems use a separate dosing chamber and pump, located downstream from the septic tank, to move effluent into a drainfield which
in turn distributes effluent through a pressure-fed network of distribution pipes. (Jantrania/Gross wastewater system type II or if treated to level 2 or better effluent, system type VI)
Pressure dosing is used in a variety of disposal field designs including mounds and sand beds, and have the advantage of being able to distribute effluent
uniformly throughout the absorption system, and the disadvantage of added system cost and complexity, along with the requirement for electricity for system operation.
An alternative but possibly less long-term reliable version of a drainfield dosing system that may not require electricity is the siphon system.
Also see Dosing Systems, Gravity/Siphon.
- Raised Septic System: a wastewater absorption trench system which has been constructed in soil-fill material which has been placed
on top of the natural soil on a building lot. Raised systems are often confused with "mound systems" (see below) but have different design requirements, and make at least partial use of existing soils for wastewater treatment.
Also see "Mound Systems" above.
- Sand: Intermittent Sand Filter Septic System: wastewater effluent from the septic tank is intermittently distributed over the surface of a specially prepared
bed of sand placed atop the existing soil surface. Effluent which has passed through the sand is collected by additional pipes at the bottom of the sand bed. The sand is not visible as it's covered by topsoil.
- Spray effluent dispersal systems, treating effluent to level 3 or better (Jantrania/Gross wastewater system type X).
Spray systems are normally above ground effluent dispersal systems.
- Septic tank and graywater filters are products used at a septic tank outlet or at a graywater tank inlet or outlet to prevent suspended solids from reaching and
clogging the soil absorption system. Readers should distinguish between in-tank septic or graywater filters
and types of septic media filter and bed systems such as:
mound systems or
raised bed septic systems,
media filter septic systems,
septic systems or sand-bed systems.
- Steep Slope Septic Designs - how to install sewer lines from building to septic tank; how to install septic drainfields, leach field systems at steep or sloped sites.
- Trenches for effluent dispersal, gravity fed or pressure dosed, with gravel or gravelless systems are discussed
under conventional septic and drainfield pages, pressure dosing, or gravelless systems. Also see "Gravity Trenches" above.
- Waterless toilets and graywater systems: see the various toilet types and greywater/graywater links on this
page such as chemical toilets,
composting toilets, and
incinerating toilets. (Jantrania/Gross wastewater system type IV).
Also see Greywater Septic Systems.
- Wetland Septic Systems or "natural" septic
systems use a constructed wetlands area (or a greenhouse) to treat septic effluent. These systems are more common in Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, South Dakota, and Florida where both municipal wetland septic designs and private homeowner wetland septic system designs are in use. "Wetlands" may include both visible water such as open ponds, and underground water located in constructed beds which are covered with soil. Also see Lagoon Systems.
The Septic Systems Online Book - Where Are We?
Technical Reviewers
Particular thanks are due to experts and also consumers who read these articles and suggest corrections, changes, and additions to
the material. Content suggestions, technical corrections and content critique are invited for any of the content at our website.
- Alan Carson Carson Dunlop Associates, Toronto, Ontario. Mr. Carson is a home inspection professional, educator, researcher, writer, and a principal of Carson Dunlop Associates, a Toronto home inspection and education firm. Mr. Carson is a past president of ASHI, the American Society of Home Inspectors
- Daniel Friedman - principal author
- Technical reviewers are invited to comment or ask questions - contact us
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