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Can I run my washing machine drain line into a condensate pump so it drains better?



The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InHow can I deal with waste water from a washing machine in a non-plumbed room?Running air handler condensate drain into sump?Draining washing machine into yardCan the high efficiency washing machine drain into the kitchen waste stack?Can my water heater's relief valve discharge line and drain pan line merge into a common pipe?Mini Split condensate pump to condensate drainMy washing machine drain is over flowing.How might I discharge a sump pump, furnace condensate line, and water softener to a single floor drain?Washing machine drain line goes upRunning ice machine with broken drain pump as gravity-drained



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2















I have this ventless combination washer/dryer from LG:



https://www.lg.com/us/washer-dryer-combos/lg-WM3997HWA-washer-dryer-combo



The unit is installed on an upper level of my house. It's on the other side of the wall from a bathroom sink. They use the same supply/drain lines.



The drain pump in the washer recently burned out (one month after the warranty expired, of course).



Apparently this is a common problem when draining the unit into a wall drain, as opposed to a floor drain. Even though the instructions clearly say that a wall drain is fine, the drain pump is underpowered and can't capably move the water 2' up to the drain. This causes dry cycles to be extremely long, and the pump to eventually fail.



I know that the main options are:



  1. Install a floor drain. I suspect this will be much more trouble than it's worth, since it'll mean taking up laminate floors, running new lines, etc.

  2. Install a lower wall drain. I don't think this will work since it would be downstream of the sink, and I'd need to re-do all the venting.

  3. Put the washer on a pedestal so the drain pump doesn't have to pump up.

I'm wondering if there's another option: get a condensate pump (like the one our central air conditioner uses), put it on the ground next to the washer, drain the washer into the pump, and have the pump force the water into the wall drain.



What I like about this idea:



  • Condensate pumps are much less expensive than pedestals

  • It's very quick to install

  • I don't need to lift a 200-pound washer onto a pedestal

But I'm not sure whether a condensate pump can handle grey water from a washer.



Thoughts?










share|improve this question






















  • Have you considered just replacing the pump motor when it burns out? The motor for this washer costs $65 (half that for an aftermarket brand). I don't know how hard it is to replace (it was only an hour's work when I replaced my Kenmore's motor) but it may be the easiest/cheapest option.

    – Johnny
    Mar 30 at 6:56











  • I replaced it yesterday. Not too bad. Still, it would be nice if that wasn't necessary, and would be especially nice to speed up dry cycles.

    – RobertAKARobin
    Mar 30 at 14:58











  • Did you make full effort on the warranty claim? Often companies will bend when you're not far off...

    – Harper
    Mar 30 at 15:23

















2















I have this ventless combination washer/dryer from LG:



https://www.lg.com/us/washer-dryer-combos/lg-WM3997HWA-washer-dryer-combo



The unit is installed on an upper level of my house. It's on the other side of the wall from a bathroom sink. They use the same supply/drain lines.



The drain pump in the washer recently burned out (one month after the warranty expired, of course).



Apparently this is a common problem when draining the unit into a wall drain, as opposed to a floor drain. Even though the instructions clearly say that a wall drain is fine, the drain pump is underpowered and can't capably move the water 2' up to the drain. This causes dry cycles to be extremely long, and the pump to eventually fail.



I know that the main options are:



  1. Install a floor drain. I suspect this will be much more trouble than it's worth, since it'll mean taking up laminate floors, running new lines, etc.

  2. Install a lower wall drain. I don't think this will work since it would be downstream of the sink, and I'd need to re-do all the venting.

  3. Put the washer on a pedestal so the drain pump doesn't have to pump up.

I'm wondering if there's another option: get a condensate pump (like the one our central air conditioner uses), put it on the ground next to the washer, drain the washer into the pump, and have the pump force the water into the wall drain.



What I like about this idea:



  • Condensate pumps are much less expensive than pedestals

  • It's very quick to install

  • I don't need to lift a 200-pound washer onto a pedestal

But I'm not sure whether a condensate pump can handle grey water from a washer.



Thoughts?










share|improve this question






















  • Have you considered just replacing the pump motor when it burns out? The motor for this washer costs $65 (half that for an aftermarket brand). I don't know how hard it is to replace (it was only an hour's work when I replaced my Kenmore's motor) but it may be the easiest/cheapest option.

    – Johnny
    Mar 30 at 6:56











  • I replaced it yesterday. Not too bad. Still, it would be nice if that wasn't necessary, and would be especially nice to speed up dry cycles.

    – RobertAKARobin
    Mar 30 at 14:58











  • Did you make full effort on the warranty claim? Often companies will bend when you're not far off...

    – Harper
    Mar 30 at 15:23













2












2








2








I have this ventless combination washer/dryer from LG:



https://www.lg.com/us/washer-dryer-combos/lg-WM3997HWA-washer-dryer-combo



The unit is installed on an upper level of my house. It's on the other side of the wall from a bathroom sink. They use the same supply/drain lines.



The drain pump in the washer recently burned out (one month after the warranty expired, of course).



Apparently this is a common problem when draining the unit into a wall drain, as opposed to a floor drain. Even though the instructions clearly say that a wall drain is fine, the drain pump is underpowered and can't capably move the water 2' up to the drain. This causes dry cycles to be extremely long, and the pump to eventually fail.



I know that the main options are:



  1. Install a floor drain. I suspect this will be much more trouble than it's worth, since it'll mean taking up laminate floors, running new lines, etc.

  2. Install a lower wall drain. I don't think this will work since it would be downstream of the sink, and I'd need to re-do all the venting.

  3. Put the washer on a pedestal so the drain pump doesn't have to pump up.

I'm wondering if there's another option: get a condensate pump (like the one our central air conditioner uses), put it on the ground next to the washer, drain the washer into the pump, and have the pump force the water into the wall drain.



What I like about this idea:



  • Condensate pumps are much less expensive than pedestals

  • It's very quick to install

  • I don't need to lift a 200-pound washer onto a pedestal

But I'm not sure whether a condensate pump can handle grey water from a washer.



Thoughts?










share|improve this question














I have this ventless combination washer/dryer from LG:



https://www.lg.com/us/washer-dryer-combos/lg-WM3997HWA-washer-dryer-combo



The unit is installed on an upper level of my house. It's on the other side of the wall from a bathroom sink. They use the same supply/drain lines.



The drain pump in the washer recently burned out (one month after the warranty expired, of course).



Apparently this is a common problem when draining the unit into a wall drain, as opposed to a floor drain. Even though the instructions clearly say that a wall drain is fine, the drain pump is underpowered and can't capably move the water 2' up to the drain. This causes dry cycles to be extremely long, and the pump to eventually fail.



I know that the main options are:



  1. Install a floor drain. I suspect this will be much more trouble than it's worth, since it'll mean taking up laminate floors, running new lines, etc.

  2. Install a lower wall drain. I don't think this will work since it would be downstream of the sink, and I'd need to re-do all the venting.

  3. Put the washer on a pedestal so the drain pump doesn't have to pump up.

I'm wondering if there's another option: get a condensate pump (like the one our central air conditioner uses), put it on the ground next to the washer, drain the washer into the pump, and have the pump force the water into the wall drain.



What I like about this idea:



  • Condensate pumps are much less expensive than pedestals

  • It's very quick to install

  • I don't need to lift a 200-pound washer onto a pedestal

But I'm not sure whether a condensate pump can handle grey water from a washer.



Thoughts?







plumbing appliances washing-machine pump






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Mar 29 at 23:39









RobertAKARobinRobertAKARobin

1425




1425












  • Have you considered just replacing the pump motor when it burns out? The motor for this washer costs $65 (half that for an aftermarket brand). I don't know how hard it is to replace (it was only an hour's work when I replaced my Kenmore's motor) but it may be the easiest/cheapest option.

    – Johnny
    Mar 30 at 6:56











  • I replaced it yesterday. Not too bad. Still, it would be nice if that wasn't necessary, and would be especially nice to speed up dry cycles.

    – RobertAKARobin
    Mar 30 at 14:58











  • Did you make full effort on the warranty claim? Often companies will bend when you're not far off...

    – Harper
    Mar 30 at 15:23

















  • Have you considered just replacing the pump motor when it burns out? The motor for this washer costs $65 (half that for an aftermarket brand). I don't know how hard it is to replace (it was only an hour's work when I replaced my Kenmore's motor) but it may be the easiest/cheapest option.

    – Johnny
    Mar 30 at 6:56











  • I replaced it yesterday. Not too bad. Still, it would be nice if that wasn't necessary, and would be especially nice to speed up dry cycles.

    – RobertAKARobin
    Mar 30 at 14:58











  • Did you make full effort on the warranty claim? Often companies will bend when you're not far off...

    – Harper
    Mar 30 at 15:23
















Have you considered just replacing the pump motor when it burns out? The motor for this washer costs $65 (half that for an aftermarket brand). I don't know how hard it is to replace (it was only an hour's work when I replaced my Kenmore's motor) but it may be the easiest/cheapest option.

– Johnny
Mar 30 at 6:56





Have you considered just replacing the pump motor when it burns out? The motor for this washer costs $65 (half that for an aftermarket brand). I don't know how hard it is to replace (it was only an hour's work when I replaced my Kenmore's motor) but it may be the easiest/cheapest option.

– Johnny
Mar 30 at 6:56













I replaced it yesterday. Not too bad. Still, it would be nice if that wasn't necessary, and would be especially nice to speed up dry cycles.

– RobertAKARobin
Mar 30 at 14:58





I replaced it yesterday. Not too bad. Still, it would be nice if that wasn't necessary, and would be especially nice to speed up dry cycles.

– RobertAKARobin
Mar 30 at 14:58













Did you make full effort on the warranty claim? Often companies will bend when you're not far off...

– Harper
Mar 30 at 15:23





Did you make full effort on the warranty claim? Often companies will bend when you're not far off...

– Harper
Mar 30 at 15:23










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















6














I think you have a couple of factors to consider in using a condensate pump.



One is the volume of water per unit time relative to what the pump can handle. A condensate pump is going to expect a trickle flow from the air conditioning system.



When used as a washing machine pump, the float will rise as the reservoir fills and activate the pump. Will the condensate pump remove water at a rate to match or exceed the washing machine?



Washing machines work in cycles. If the reservoir is too small to handle a maximum load cycle and the pump rate is too low, flooding may result.



On the other hand, if you can supplement the reservoir in some manner, the pump rate becomes less critical.



I don't think the water "quality" is going to be a problem. The output of a washing machine is grit/sand/dirt/fibers. The heavy stuff is going to collect in the reservoir and the suspended stuff is going to be pumped. I have a filter on our washing machine that catches all the washed-out material that used to enter my septic tank. I'm amazed at the grit/sand quantities, but also at the shed fibers that are captured. The low cost pumps typically use an impeller which is resistant to problems related to suspended material found in a washing machine output.






share|improve this answer






























    3














    I'm not aware of any condensate pumps capable of handling that much water but you could use a small sump pump in a suitably sized basin. There is a condensate pump on Amazon that claims 4 gpm but I'm sure just about any washer drains more than that. The condensate that comes out of a furnace or boiler will be more corrosive and harsh than the water coming out of washer. That's not the problem, the capacity is.






    share|improve this answer























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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      6














      I think you have a couple of factors to consider in using a condensate pump.



      One is the volume of water per unit time relative to what the pump can handle. A condensate pump is going to expect a trickle flow from the air conditioning system.



      When used as a washing machine pump, the float will rise as the reservoir fills and activate the pump. Will the condensate pump remove water at a rate to match or exceed the washing machine?



      Washing machines work in cycles. If the reservoir is too small to handle a maximum load cycle and the pump rate is too low, flooding may result.



      On the other hand, if you can supplement the reservoir in some manner, the pump rate becomes less critical.



      I don't think the water "quality" is going to be a problem. The output of a washing machine is grit/sand/dirt/fibers. The heavy stuff is going to collect in the reservoir and the suspended stuff is going to be pumped. I have a filter on our washing machine that catches all the washed-out material that used to enter my septic tank. I'm amazed at the grit/sand quantities, but also at the shed fibers that are captured. The low cost pumps typically use an impeller which is resistant to problems related to suspended material found in a washing machine output.






      share|improve this answer



























        6














        I think you have a couple of factors to consider in using a condensate pump.



        One is the volume of water per unit time relative to what the pump can handle. A condensate pump is going to expect a trickle flow from the air conditioning system.



        When used as a washing machine pump, the float will rise as the reservoir fills and activate the pump. Will the condensate pump remove water at a rate to match or exceed the washing machine?



        Washing machines work in cycles. If the reservoir is too small to handle a maximum load cycle and the pump rate is too low, flooding may result.



        On the other hand, if you can supplement the reservoir in some manner, the pump rate becomes less critical.



        I don't think the water "quality" is going to be a problem. The output of a washing machine is grit/sand/dirt/fibers. The heavy stuff is going to collect in the reservoir and the suspended stuff is going to be pumped. I have a filter on our washing machine that catches all the washed-out material that used to enter my septic tank. I'm amazed at the grit/sand quantities, but also at the shed fibers that are captured. The low cost pumps typically use an impeller which is resistant to problems related to suspended material found in a washing machine output.






        share|improve this answer

























          6












          6








          6







          I think you have a couple of factors to consider in using a condensate pump.



          One is the volume of water per unit time relative to what the pump can handle. A condensate pump is going to expect a trickle flow from the air conditioning system.



          When used as a washing machine pump, the float will rise as the reservoir fills and activate the pump. Will the condensate pump remove water at a rate to match or exceed the washing machine?



          Washing machines work in cycles. If the reservoir is too small to handle a maximum load cycle and the pump rate is too low, flooding may result.



          On the other hand, if you can supplement the reservoir in some manner, the pump rate becomes less critical.



          I don't think the water "quality" is going to be a problem. The output of a washing machine is grit/sand/dirt/fibers. The heavy stuff is going to collect in the reservoir and the suspended stuff is going to be pumped. I have a filter on our washing machine that catches all the washed-out material that used to enter my septic tank. I'm amazed at the grit/sand quantities, but also at the shed fibers that are captured. The low cost pumps typically use an impeller which is resistant to problems related to suspended material found in a washing machine output.






          share|improve this answer













          I think you have a couple of factors to consider in using a condensate pump.



          One is the volume of water per unit time relative to what the pump can handle. A condensate pump is going to expect a trickle flow from the air conditioning system.



          When used as a washing machine pump, the float will rise as the reservoir fills and activate the pump. Will the condensate pump remove water at a rate to match or exceed the washing machine?



          Washing machines work in cycles. If the reservoir is too small to handle a maximum load cycle and the pump rate is too low, flooding may result.



          On the other hand, if you can supplement the reservoir in some manner, the pump rate becomes less critical.



          I don't think the water "quality" is going to be a problem. The output of a washing machine is grit/sand/dirt/fibers. The heavy stuff is going to collect in the reservoir and the suspended stuff is going to be pumped. I have a filter on our washing machine that catches all the washed-out material that used to enter my septic tank. I'm amazed at the grit/sand quantities, but also at the shed fibers that are captured. The low cost pumps typically use an impeller which is resistant to problems related to suspended material found in a washing machine output.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Mar 30 at 0:19









          fred_dot_ufred_dot_u

          4,8821718




          4,8821718























              3














              I'm not aware of any condensate pumps capable of handling that much water but you could use a small sump pump in a suitably sized basin. There is a condensate pump on Amazon that claims 4 gpm but I'm sure just about any washer drains more than that. The condensate that comes out of a furnace or boiler will be more corrosive and harsh than the water coming out of washer. That's not the problem, the capacity is.






              share|improve this answer



























                3














                I'm not aware of any condensate pumps capable of handling that much water but you could use a small sump pump in a suitably sized basin. There is a condensate pump on Amazon that claims 4 gpm but I'm sure just about any washer drains more than that. The condensate that comes out of a furnace or boiler will be more corrosive and harsh than the water coming out of washer. That's not the problem, the capacity is.






                share|improve this answer

























                  3












                  3








                  3







                  I'm not aware of any condensate pumps capable of handling that much water but you could use a small sump pump in a suitably sized basin. There is a condensate pump on Amazon that claims 4 gpm but I'm sure just about any washer drains more than that. The condensate that comes out of a furnace or boiler will be more corrosive and harsh than the water coming out of washer. That's not the problem, the capacity is.






                  share|improve this answer













                  I'm not aware of any condensate pumps capable of handling that much water but you could use a small sump pump in a suitably sized basin. There is a condensate pump on Amazon that claims 4 gpm but I'm sure just about any washer drains more than that. The condensate that comes out of a furnace or boiler will be more corrosive and harsh than the water coming out of washer. That's not the problem, the capacity is.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Mar 30 at 1:30









                  Joe FalaJoe Fala

                  5,275328




                  5,275328



























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