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Wet-vacs aren't pumps! 15 July 2006
A. Our recent spate of heavy rains invaded the basements of homeowners who have lived a generation in homes whose basements never saw a drop until then. After Isabel we learned the magic number was 48 hours to get control of things in terms of interior moisture control before mold and mildew set in. People will use any means at hand to that end and therein, as you wisely note, the danger lurks. The very first thing anyone should know about a wet vac, a very handy tool indeed and sometimes called a shop vac, is it isn’t a pump. Sure, it will pull up small amounts of water and wet vacs usually have gallon ratings printed on them, such as eight or ten gallons, letting you know what the capacity is. You may have noticed while using your vac as it got to the point of needing to be emptied the sound of the motor changed pitch-- higher-- and the wand didn’t suck water anymore. There is a float device inside of the filter assembly that floats up as the vacuum’s can fills with liquid and blocks the intake. Obviously, if it didn’t have such a stop-gap feature users wouldn’t have any idea the canister is filling to capacity until it overflowed. Most w et vacs that I’ve seen have common electric motors located on the tops of the canisters so they’re not likely to get wet unless water gets sloshed onto them or tip over into a depth of water while running. Then you hope for other safety measures to keep you in the land of the living. No one should ever use any electric tool in the environment you describe without it being connected to a safety outlet called a “Ground-Fault Circuit Interrupter” (GFCI). That’s the type of outlet that has the little test and reset buttons on the center of the faceplate between the two receptacles. Most people first encountered them in bathrooms. But as the locations of electrocutions in homes and work places were studied, they started showing up in many more potentially hazardous locations such as kitchens, basements, garages and any exterior outlet. The way they work is they sense the electrical current being used and if even a small amount gets loose, looking for a ground source other than the circuit itself, it shuts it down. The safety feature is should the loose current, say in the water of a wet flooded basement, choose to pass through you on its way to ground then you may not survive the encounter. If your home was built within the last 20 years or so and the basement was unfinished then the outlet should have been GFCI protected. But with basements, when they become finished spaces, the requirement for the GFCI goes away and should that basement flood and you bring electrical equipment to work on it, such as a wet vac, the likelihood that the power source to which you connect won’t be safe soars. You can buy an inexpensive plug strip that has an inherent GFCI in it and they are great. Plug the GFCI strip in to an unprotected or regular outlet and then plug whatever tool you’re using into the strip and you are safe to go. Construction workers regularly use these strips to comply with safety regulations. The sad thing is in the upset of dealing with something like a basement flood, most folks don't take the time to put safety first. I’m not sure God really cares when He meets you. As for the rubber boots, keep them on but don’t count on them. |