As shown in the drawing, the large tank receives its supply of water from the well and aside from providing a reserve supply furnishes power for pumping cistern water. The water from the large tank is piped into the house for use as required, and from the same pipe is taken a hydrant for lawn sprinkling; in addition, this water is piped to the barn where it is used for watering stock. A branch of the same pipe is intended to operate a water lift, which in turn furnishes the house with soft water from the rain-water cistern for bathing, laundry, and kitchen purposes.

Fig. 148.—This diagram shows the arrangement of domestic water-supply apparatus, in which a windmill furnishes the pressure necessary for operating the entire plant.

The Water Lift.

—The water lift is a combined water engine and pump, the motive power for which is the pressure from the well-water tank. The soft water, pumped by the water lift, is stored in the smaller pressure tank marked Soft Water Pressure Tank in the drawing, and furnishes a supply for the purposes mentioned. The water lift is so constructed that when the pressure in the soft-water tank equals the pressure in the well-water tank, the lift will stop working and will not start again until water has been drawn from the taps. Whenever water is drawn from any part of the system, the pressure will be reduced and the lift will immediately begin pumping more water and will continue until the pressure of the two tanks are the same. The system is entirely automatic, each part depending on the power originally supplied by the windmill. The plant could be just as successfully operated by substituting a gasoline engine or other source of power for the windmill. The machinery for such a plant is not at all complicated neither is it difficult to manage, yet it is complete in every particular and furnishes an almost ideal arrangement for a country or suburban home.

Fig. 149.—The water lift.

In order to be assured of a supply of water over periods of atmospheric quiet, the well-water tank must be sufficiently large to supply water for 3 or 4 days; but in case of emergency water may be pumped by hand.

A nearer view of the water lift is shown in Fig. 149. In the figure, the right-hand cylinder with its valve V is the water engine which furnishes the power for operating the pump, enclosed in the left-hand cylinder. The water pressure of the main supply furnishes the energy which drives the engine, the piston rod of which is attached to the pump piston. The engine receives its supply of water through the pipe marked Inlet and the waste water is discharged to the sewer by the waste pipe on the opposite side of the cylinder. The operation of the lift is governed by an automatic regulator which so controls the engine that it starts pumping whenever the pressure in the system falls to a certain point. The regulator marked Adjustable Regulator in the drawing may be adjusted to suit the water pressure desired in the distributing system.