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Flood Pumpers

High-volume submersible and trash pumps for rapidly removing standing flood water before extraction equipment is deployed. Handles debris-laden water, mud, and solids that would clog standard water extractors. Used by restoration contractors and emergency response teams on large water loss jobs.

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Flood Pumpers for Rapid Bulk Water Removal

How Flood Pumpers Work

Submersible and trash pumps move high volumes of standing water by lowering the pump head into the water, connecting a discharge hose to a drain or exterior discharge point, and running the pump until the water level drops below the pump's intake. Electric submersible models handle clean to lightly contaminated water with solids up to 0.75 inches in diameter. Trash pumps — typically gas-engine-driven — handle heavily contaminated water with larger solids, mud, and debris that would damage a submersible pump's impeller. On large commercial flood losses, a 2-inch or 3-inch trash pump removes hundreds of gallons per minute, reducing standing water depth to extraction-equipment levels in minutes rather than hours.

Flood Pumpers vs. Water Extractors

Water extractors are designed for the final extraction phase — pulling water from carpet, pad, and subfloor assemblies after standing water has been removed. Running an extractor into standing water overloads the recovery tank rapidly and requires constant interruption to empty. Flood pumpers handle the bulk removal phase: lowering standing water from multiple inches to near-zero depth before the extractor and air mover deployment begins. On jobs with more than a few gallons of standing water, deploying a pump first reduces total extraction time and protects the extractor from excessive wear.

Related collections: flood water extraction, drying equipment, restoration dehumidifiers, air movers

When to Use a Flood Pumper

Deploy a flood pumper whenever standing water depth exceeds 1 inch across a significant portion of the affected area. Basements with sump failure, commercial kitchens after sprinkler discharge, ground-floor commercial spaces after exterior flooding, and crawl spaces after ground water intrusion are all scenarios where a pump is required before extraction equipment can be effectively used. For restoration contractors responding to large commercial losses, a 2-inch or 3-inch portable trash pump is standard truck equipment — reducing response-to-drying-equipment time on any job with standing water.

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