@Wyatt Smith might have some guidance for you. He's a farming dude.
Yes I really think for the climate the OP describes he could trade labor for cost of buying a commercial waterer and build something like you suggest.We did similar installations in W CO. Plenty of freezing weather days but also decent daytime temps. Used the same method to take advantage of the ground temps, tanks are concrete and shaped like a big soup bowl. I don’t think they ever freeze more than a skiff. Pretty sharp old feedlot guy came up with it.
Thanks. That is really helpful. JFC sell a very similar product here but without the ability to fit a heater![]()
Mira-Fount waterers
Miraco Mira-Fount waterers promote healthy livestock. Miraco was the first to engineer both these Mira-fount energy-free & automatic livestock waterers.miraco.com
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Local building codes here mean we also have to have non syphoning valves. We are on a borehole supplying several houses on the farmYes I really think for the climate the OP describes he could trade labor for cost of buying a commercial waterer and build something like you suggest.
With dairy we are required to have non siphoning valves which means above the water level so adds challenges.
I really think you will be ok without electric heat if the waterer is well insulated and you install it properly with even a 6" x 2' riser tube under the middle for the water line.Thanks. That is really helpful. JFC sell a very similar product here but without the ability to fit a heater
I am in Florida so not really that coldI realise that this is an entirely inappropriate question for an African hunting forum, but as this is I my only contact with anyone in the US, I though someone might have a solution. Please feel free to PM me if it avoids clogging up the forum
I took a look. I don't think they are anywhere close to the same from what I can see on line. Looks like the water line comes up along the outside. And I may be mistaken but it looks like a simple single wall tank not a double wall with foam insulation in between. Might be just fine for your climate but wouldn't stand a chance in ours.Thanks. That is really helpful. JFC sell a very similar product here but without the ability to fit a heater
Them Texicans think it's always warm, and build accordingly. When I lived in Longview, every time the word freezing was mentioned on the news everybody seemed to think the world was going to end. Actually, that seems to be the case throughout the SE. One farmhouse we looked at south of Tyler had the water line from the well laying on the ground; as it had been for 50+ years according to the guy who lived there. Oddly enough, it didn't look like 50 year old pipe....I took a look. I don't think they are anywhere close to the same from what I can see on line. Looks like the water line comes up along the outside. And I may be mistaken but it looks like a simple single wall tank not a double wall with foam insulation in between. Might be just fine for your climate but wouldn't stand a chance in ours.
Now where I live in the Texas Hill country it would be ok of the pipe coming up the outside was insulated.
In fact I find it rather ironic... I spend way more time down here in the South of Texas winterizing and dealing with frozen water and even cold coming into the house than I ever worried about in Minnesota. In Minnesota things are built for -40... which by the way is the same on both the the Fahrenheit scale and Celsius. Here on Texas the builders are either clueless or just incompetent, or don't give a damn!
Bottom fill have one bad problem in that if cattle get in the tank, they break the up pipe. We ended up surrounding the valve with large C channel bolted into the tank bottom to protect it. Heated it with a submersible propane heater.We are currently planning new cattle housing or more likely straw yards to replace 1950's buildings that have reached the end of their life.
Our winters aren't that bad, it is typically around 40 degrees fahrenheit, with around 3-4 weeks of 17-32 and every couple of years, it gets down to 5 degrees for a few days.
The water system invariably fails when it get below 28 degrees. The ballcocks freeze up and every exposed pipe freezes. We have a very badly designed system which is at least 50 years old.
What do you use to ensure a reliable supply in the winter?
I am thinking of using bottom filled troughs (very expensive though) and all pipes well below ground level.
It’s your post , your thread . Fire away. I’m sure you will get some helpI realise that this is an entirely inappropriate question for an African hunting forum, but as this is my only contact with anyone in the US, I though someone might have a solution. Please feel free to PM me if it avoids clogging up the forum