timjet
Guru
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2009
- Messages
- 1,920
This is a little off topic, maybe way off topic but maybe the appropriate place to post.
The admiral and I live in a home with a well and not so good water. We have always purchased water for drinking and ice for drinks. We use 5 gallon refillable bottles for drinking that we purchase from a vending machine and purchase ice from the supermarket.
The other day I removed the icemaker aboard the boat. We never use it and it just adds weight, which cost money to haul around. So I began to think, maybe I could use the icemaker at home. I would have to purchase a DC pump to supply bottled water to the icemaker and a float switch to remove power from the pump when the water got too low. I’d also have to get a transformer for the DC portion of the setup.
But then I began to think again realizing I already have an icemaker in our refrigerator. It would be more cost effective from an energy use standpoint to use our existing icemaker, but the problem is I would have to get a filter to use our well water. I don’t want to do that because the filter would constantly need changing.
So can I rig up a device that would allow bottled water to supply the water for the icemaker in the refrigerator? Could the water be supplied to the icemaker by gravity by placing the bottled water on top of the refrigerator? This of course would be the easiest way but I suspect some pressure would be required to make the icemaker work. So is there an AC pump that I can use that has an auto shutoff built in that will prevent the pump from pumping when the bottled water container goes dry and wouldn’t require constant monitoring?
I’m looking for ideas!
Thanks guys.
The admiral and I live in a home with a well and not so good water. We have always purchased water for drinking and ice for drinks. We use 5 gallon refillable bottles for drinking that we purchase from a vending machine and purchase ice from the supermarket.
The other day I removed the icemaker aboard the boat. We never use it and it just adds weight, which cost money to haul around. So I began to think, maybe I could use the icemaker at home. I would have to purchase a DC pump to supply bottled water to the icemaker and a float switch to remove power from the pump when the water got too low. I’d also have to get a transformer for the DC portion of the setup.
But then I began to think again realizing I already have an icemaker in our refrigerator. It would be more cost effective from an energy use standpoint to use our existing icemaker, but the problem is I would have to get a filter to use our well water. I don’t want to do that because the filter would constantly need changing.
So can I rig up a device that would allow bottled water to supply the water for the icemaker in the refrigerator? Could the water be supplied to the icemaker by gravity by placing the bottled water on top of the refrigerator? This of course would be the easiest way but I suspect some pressure would be required to make the icemaker work. So is there an AC pump that I can use that has an auto shutoff built in that will prevent the pump from pumping when the bottled water container goes dry and wouldn’t require constant monitoring?
I’m looking for ideas!
Thanks guys.