@@CoryFloodwayPrintCo You are one of a few, who actually explain how to clean the waste in the water and in a pretty economical way, no 3K or 5K filtration tanks etc. Keep up the great work !!
Thank you! Simple stuff like this goes a longggg way. Just less messing around with replaceable filters, less clogged sink, water flows better which makes reclaim simpler, the list goes on!
Have you ever tought of adding a second solid trap (lower down than the first one) in front of your Ryonet system ? You could get the pipe of the first gowing vertically down at a couple of inches of the bottom and allow only top water back to the Ryonet system. You might catch a little bit more stuff and expend duration of the ryonet system before cleaning.
This 5gal bucket IS in front of the Ryonet box. I have seen multi-stage solids traps but I wouldn’t want to implement anything harder to clean than this. The Ryonet box is great but in my opinion it needs a solids trap in front of it most definitely.
@@CoryFloodwayPrintCo I meant between the first solid trap and the ryonet. But I can see that another step would add a cleaning step, but if it can help you clean the ryonet even less offten. Idk.
I haven’t had to drop anything off yet. I let the sludge solidify and it keeps shrinking, so I’ve yet to fill a 5gal bucket of it yet. But any standard waste removal company can handle this stuff there’s nothing too special about it. Just want to make sure it doesn’t go straight to landfill at least since we’ve went through the trouble to keep it out of the drain. I’m going to make an update video soon. Believe it or not I haven’t had to clean the system out since making this video.
Just letting you know I work at my local paint recycler dried sludge just goes directly to landfill. Anything else just re-sealed in a paint can for sold for a cheap price to poor countries