Making the right decision when it comes to backflow enclosures, as with any investment or major purchase, requires comprehensive consideration and research. Whether it’s a new vehicle, a new home or even rehabilitation from a major medical procedure, knowing how much effort needs to go into maintaining any of these should be a serious decision point. The same can be said for choosing a backflow enclosure: can I get away with a backflow preventer cage? Or should I choose aluminum?
We’ll grant that, in a vacuum, the questions above aren’t fairly worded. Weigh out the potential maintenance challenges with backflow preventer cages, though, you’ll see that there really isn’t a decision to be made: if you try to make a cage work, you’ll invite a host of headaches when it comes to upkeep.
Additionally, if the backflow preventer cage is oversized to accommodate maintenance, it’s also oversized for thieves to find ways to break into it. One should also consider that, like many a pro wrestling match, if a steel cage is made to be accessible, it’s made to be broken into.
That means unsightly bags, either insulated and secured (ostensibly redundant inside a cage) or of the off-the-shelf variety found in any grocery store. Or it means rolling the dice and hoping the weather doesn’t get wild.
As mentioned above, a cage’s inherent limitations require secondary actions to protect against extreme weather. We’ve talked recently about instances where theft from cages have resulted in unexpected lost revenue and municipal damage, saying nothing of wasted manpower and a critical natural resource. Run a Google search for backflow preventer cage theft, and you’ll find images of backflow cages with cage enclosure lock downs: one example is fabricated steel tubing with an inner pipe, installed around the cage.
It doesn’t take much to recognize this kind of ancillary product shouldn’t be needed in the first place. This isn’t a failsafe like multi-factor authentication, it’s overkill and overcompensation – a tacit confession that the first countermeasure fundamentally is not good enough.
A treated cage, meaning powder coated steel or any other kind of application to the steel structure, is expected to last anywhere from 15-20 years. That sounds great, until you consider that a marine grade aluminum backflow preventer enclosure braced with California redwood can reasonably be expected to last for 30 years, and at roughly the same upfront cost.
Cages may be a value similar to that of an insulated bag, but it’s face value: cages don’t represent the best value for protecting your backflow preventer. A Safe-T-Cover modular enclosure provides superior security, protection from the elements, space to service, the right to repair and can outlast any backflow cage on the market.
Don’t box yourself in with insufficient backflow enclosure solutions, make the right call with Safe-T-Cover.