I am making it up as I go with 2 DIY poured -concrete spill over pools...
I have already cast the concrete for a small indoor knife-edge pool, with gravity fed balance tank below. It went well, so I starting the concrete work for a similar exterior main pool.
It occured to me that I have not provided a robust solution for managing rainwater (as it is not a relevant concern with the indoor pool). I did include an emergency spillover drain in the balance tank, but I'm not sure what to do to prevent a big storm from flooding my outdoor pool balance tank (located in a basement pool/mechanical room).
Is there a technique for preventing rainwater from overwhelming a gravity fed gutter system? I can imagine an actuated valve at he gutter drain, but thought this issue must have been addressed with a technique I'm not envisioning? Perhaps a default-closed valve that is opened only when the pumps are running? At present, I don't have protection from anything more than a 1-2" rain event other than my balance tank overflow drain.
thank you for any guidance you might have!
I have already cast the concrete for a small indoor knife-edge pool, with gravity fed balance tank below. It went well, so I starting the concrete work for a similar exterior main pool.
It occured to me that I have not provided a robust solution for managing rainwater (as it is not a relevant concern with the indoor pool). I did include an emergency spillover drain in the balance tank, but I'm not sure what to do to prevent a big storm from flooding my outdoor pool balance tank (located in a basement pool/mechanical room).
Is there a technique for preventing rainwater from overwhelming a gravity fed gutter system? I can imagine an actuated valve at he gutter drain, but thought this issue must have been addressed with a technique I'm not envisioning? Perhaps a default-closed valve that is opened only when the pumps are running? At present, I don't have protection from anything more than a 1-2" rain event other than my balance tank overflow drain.
thank you for any guidance you might have!