Thumper wrote:I've seen that application. You can buy an external float that plugs into the outlet. Short the pump to run all the time then you plug it into the back side of the new float plug. When the new float (uhh floats) it energizes the plug and the pump powers on.
I found an entire cap assembly (switch, float lever, handle, cord) for like $75. The entire pump costs less than $200. The switch coming in from Amazon tomorrow cost me $12. I was willing to pay a little more to have a genuine Ridgid replacement that I knew for sure fit my application. But oh well.
vendic wrote:A happy ending!
pumpkinpi wrote:Ugh. Sorry. Also, sorry about the bad interaction with the uneducated Home Depot employee. I've had some myself, but I don't blame them. I blame the box store model, when their dozens/hundreds of employees per store really can't be able to answer every question. I went to a HD once looking for gaffer tape. Nobody even knew what it was.
gethen wrote:Never going to understand how some people think. We just spent a week in Florida with two other couples. Nice people, and we've travelled with them before.
Tarragon wrote:And to think those big box store associates want $15 per hour?
Of course, if they made a living wage, they might stick around and learn enough to be useful.
Of course, if they were useful and made a living wage, the price would go up a few cents and then people would buy online after talking to them.
The only solution is to nuke the 'net from orbit. It's the only way to be sure.
Thumper wrote:Every once in a while you get lucky going into a Home Depot. You find a guy with 20 years of experience in the area you need assistance in. He helps you and you're well on your way to your home improvement solution. Turns out he was the manager of the local mom and pop hardware /plumbing supply/electrical contractor supply store that was forced out of business when the Home Depot came to town. He had to get a job there to put food on his table.
SciFiFisher wrote:Thumper wrote:Every once in a while you get lucky going into a Home Depot. You find a guy with 20 years of experience in the area you need assistance in. He helps you and you're well on your way to your home improvement solution. Turns out he was the manager of the local mom and pop hardware /plumbing supply/electrical contractor supply store that was forced out of business when the Home Depot came to town. He had to get a job there to put food on his table.
That is sort of heart breaking.
geonuc wrote:SciFiFisher wrote:Thumper wrote:Every once in a while you get lucky going into a Home Depot. You find a guy with 20 years of experience in the area you need assistance in. He helps you and you're well on your way to your home improvement solution. Turns out he was the manager of the local mom and pop hardware /plumbing supply/electrical contractor supply store that was forced out of business when the Home Depot came to town. He had to get a job there to put food on his table.
That is sort of heart breaking.
On the surface, maybe, but the guy may actually be doing better financially than he was before.
SciFiFisher wrote:On the surface, maybe, but the guy may actually be doing better financially than he was before.
Rommie wrote:Well it is normal, it's what is a standard of usual transactions people do when starting a business, so by definition it is.
vendic wrote:Here, different people get different rates on housing loans, car loans etc. I'm not talking 1 or 2 percent, its ten or twenty percent difference.
geonuc wrote:vendic wrote:Here, different people get different rates on housing loans, car loans etc. I'm not talking 1 or 2 percent, its ten or twenty percent difference.
There are usury laws that limit interest rates on some things, such as car loans and credit cards.
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