Pumps alarms sounds a warning, when this happens, immediately check the pit for high water, ensure the pump has power, & check for a stuck float switch
Pump alarms don’t fix anything. They tell you something is already off.
High level. Low level. Loss of pressure. Fault conditions.
If they’re set correctly, they buy you time. If they’re not, they either go off constantly or not at all.
Both are useless.
A lot of alarm systems are technically installed, but not really set up.
That’s usually how it goes.
Then when a real issue hits, the response is delayed because no one trusts the signal.
An alarm panel flashing that no one reacts to straight away.
Or nothing at all, until there’s a problem you can’t ignore.
It turns reactive without anyone making that decision.
This part gets rushed more than it should.
An alarm needs to reflect how the system behaves day to day. Not just what it was designed to do on paper.
Levels need to match real operating conditions.
Trigger points need to be tight enough to matter, but not so tight they become noise.
And the alert has to go somewhere useful.
There’s no value in an alarm that only shows on a panel no one is watching.
They don’t stay accurate on their own.
So they need to be checked against real conditions. Not assumed to be fine because they were working before.
Pump alarms sit alongside the rest of the setup, not separate from it.
If the system is unstable, the alarm will reflect that. If the alarm is poorly set, it hides it.
That link matters.
That’s usually the signal something isn’t right.
Either they’re triggering too often, or not when they should.
Both point to setup or system issues that need to be looked at properly.
To review an existing alarm setup or put proper monitoring in place, call 085 767 3462 and run through how your current system is behaving.