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Random question...automatic submersible bilge pumps are cheap and readily available. For some reason, pumps advertised as shower waste pumps are often more expensive. Is there any reason that you couldn't put one in an appropriate sump and use it as the shower waste pump?
HAIR. Shower pumps have a built-in macerator to chop up stuff that would typically stop or clog a regular bilge pump
The better quality shower pumps are of the diaphragm type and not a cheap impeller that gets clogged with hair and grease. The macerator pump are the other acceptable type.
The reason the pump is so expensive is the drain has a brain! Not a macerator. The pump can be installed above the drain and is a no prime pump. The way they work is a sensor in the drain recognizes water and cycles the pump for +10 seconds. So, until water is absent after on cycle, the drain is cleared. You really need access below the shower pan to make these work. If you wanted a no prime bilge pump would work, but you'd need to manually switch it is all.
We have had several of these over the years and they were below the waterline. The sealed sump has two parts, a settling portion to trap hair etc, then a filter to ensure that the hair does not get into the flooded intake of the pump. The second section is where the pump resides. The pump was just a regular bilge pump, non-macerator style, due to the twin compartments and filters. As the pump intake was flooded and an open impeller, it could run dry. When you were using the shower you just flipped the switch and the float would take care of the operation.
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