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FULLY SUBMERSIBLE DE-WATERING PUMP

TT TT505C 230V/1Ph pump PE/TT505C/1

In stock

Our Price £2,853.76 Inc VAT £2,378.13 Ex VAT
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  • Established 1975
  • Trusted by thousands of customers

TT505C – FULLY SUBMERSIBLE DE-WATERING PUMP

T-T505C is a fully submersible de-watering pump for clean or silty water. The pump is robust and features the main components in aluminium alloy making the pump ideal for the toughest of conditions including applications such as large water features, nuisance water, civil construction and quarries and mining. 1.25kW output, 15m maximum head and 16l/sec maximum capacity.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Quick answers to common questions about the TT TT505C 230V/1Ph pump PE/TT505C/1. For technical specifications, see the product details above; for sizing or installation advice, contact our team. If you have any other questions, we're happy to help.

What is a submersible pump?

A submersible pump is designed to operate fully submerged in the liquid it is moving. The motor is sealed inside the pump body and cooled by the surrounding water. Submersibles are used for drainage, sewage, septic tanks, deep wells and boreholes, and for raising water from sumps, cellars and floodwater. Many stocked at Anglian Pumping handle solids in suspension.

Can submersible pumps handle solids and sewage?

Yes – some submersibles are designed for clean water only, others handle solids up to 50 mm or full raw sewage. Anglian Pumping stocks ABS, BBC, Flygt and T-T Submersibles ranges that include vortex, single channel and grinder impellers for different solids handling requirements. Always match the pump to the maximum solid size and the type of effluent it will see.

When should I use a submersible pump instead of a surface pump?

Use a submersible when the water level is more than around 8 metres below the pump installation point – surface pumps cannot self-prime beyond that depth. Submersibles are also better when the liquid contains solids, when noise must be minimised, or when the pump needs to operate in confined spaces such as sumps and chambers where a surface pump would not fit.