![]() ![]() Additionally the Zoeller literature does not specify which basins have the built in pump torque stops. I'd rather have a plastic cover than a steel one that could rust through however, it seems that Zoeller basins passing the 10ft stack test all have steel covers. ![]() My second option is to buy a Zoeller 10ft stack test basin and use the Zoeller M267 pump. The advantage of the Liberty Quicktree (off-pump) float and switch system would be lost by using the Zoeller pump which has an integral (on-pump) float and internal motor switching. I have no idea if the Zoeller and Liberty pumps have the same base footprint so that the Zoeller pump will engage the built in torque stops in the Liberty Pro370 basin. In this way I would already have the Liberty basin in the floor. Since I have the new Zoeller M267 pump, can it be installed in a Liberty Pro370 basin? My thought is to use the Zoeller pump in the Liberty basin until it fails and then change it out to the supposedly superior Liberty pump. I'd like some other input from members of the forum. I'm told by area plumbers that the Liberty Pro370 is the best system available. ![]() Regrettably a new Zoeller M267 pump was purchased to install in the old tank before the rust-through was discovered. Is the Zoeller or the Liberty Pro370 the better sewer ejector pump from a standpoint of longevity and serviceability? I had an old steel tank ejector of unknown manufacture rust through. ![]()
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