I'm with Atomizer on this one man, I've seen two timers recommended by people that claim to use them for years, I'm going to go with their claims on this one as they do have some support and the products to me look like what they claim. That in mind it was the Omron or this ATC, the Omron is twice the price, (though that is a damn fine looking timer) Of the two I'd say the Omron is claiming bigger things, it's for industrial automation, they demand ROI, the ATC is a fine timer that can do the 1 sec on 1 minute off and 3 sec on and 3 minutes off that I need to do, to match AgriHouse's established methodology, past that, tweaking can be had.
You're right it isn't Stainless Steel, but it's Steel, so I stand corrected, this is off a page I hunted down for the Amtrol ST-12 Thermxtrol
"Amtrol THERM-X-TROL ST-12 Expansion Tank Features:
• Brass System Connection (In-Line Models) (Stainless Steel Elbow for Vertical Models)
• Deep Drawn Steel Domes for maximum strength & pressure rating
• Rigid Poly-Propylene Liner for Corrosion Resistant Reservoir
• Butyl diaphragm for long life expectancy tested to over 250,000 cycles
• Diaphragm Hoop Ring mechanically grooved for permanent air-tight seal
• Welded Steel Construction
• Brass Air Charge fitting with Protective Plastic Cap for Corrosion Resistance. Brazed for Strength and Maximum Air-Tight Seal
Amtrol THERM-X-TROL ST-12 Expansion Tank General Usage:
• Office Buildings
• Apartment Buildings
• Dormitories
• Elderly Housing
• Extended Care Facilities
• Condominiums/Large Residential
• Food Service (other than Restaurants)
• Laundromats
• Hospitals
• Other General-Use Hot Water Systems
Amtrol THERM-X-TROL ST-12 Expansion Tank Specifications:
• Model Number - ST-12
• Total Volume (gallons) - 4.4
• Diameter (A) - 11"
• Height (B) - 15"
• System Connection - 3/4" NPT
• Materials: Steel shell, polypropylene liner, butyl diaphragm
• System Connection: ST-5, ST-12 = Brass; ST-25V to ST-210V = Stainless Steel
• Maximum Operating Temperature = 200°F
• Maximum Working Pressure = 150 PSIG
• Factory Precharge = 40 PSIG"
For $60 dollars it does the PSI I saw you all complaining about in this range of tanks, so you identified the issue for me, I used you to find out what it was in this area, and then I fixed the problem for the group, I'm not a useless eater in this scenario and consider this some of my payback for you all sharing knowledge.
I'm looking into pumps right now and I ran into a huge steam cleaning surplus sight, called steam brite, they have with respect an aquatec, then a shurflo rated at 170-150 PSI triplex demand pumps, for between $138-127, that isn't the most interesting thing though, on the page they claim that the triplex switching eliminates the kick you guys are talking about in the lines here I'll quote it.
This is from a Flojet, but it's actually talking abou the triplex diaphragm design.
"Flojet Triplex Diaphragm 3526 Series Automatic Water System Pump is a self priming dry running soft, noise absorbing mounts. Features snap-in port fittings and has corrosion resistant materials. Smooth operation without accumulator tank built-in pulsation eliminator."
My question then being is the Triplex the pulsation eliminator? as that's the issue we're all encountering.
Quick question, don't know dick about tanks, where it says system connection brass I know that's bad, can I replace that with stainless steel, if anyone knows throw a dog a bone.
here's the page for the one he's talking about
http://www.mcmaster.com/#catalog/117/897/=e0r4lw
I can see why it's cheaper, it doesn't have any face controls installed. On top of that I'm looking and maybe I'm missing it but these are single function, we need at bare minimum a dual function timer, it has to know the on and the off at the same time, since they aren't the same thing. I don't know dick about this but it has to be able to have a different setting for on and off.