Well timed Guy. I live in GF so thanks for the extra water......I have a shelf in my garage that has new pumps, old pumps, pump parts, etc. Amazing how the seasonal scaling monkeys with the float switches.
I believe it the summer of 93 when that area really took a hit. East bismarck north Divide is another one. I worked on a few unexpected remodels later that year. I understand it’s lots of fun hauling five gallon buckets of concrete up basement stairs.flooding and ground water are two different things. In Bismarck drain tile and sump pit are required by code in all new residential buildings, I believe this started in the 80's . I have witnessed more houses built on high ground in Bismarck that have ground water issues than I have seen houses in the low areas with ground water issues. The ones built on a hill or cut into a hill have to deal with clay and the water will follow the top of the clay instead of soaking in. The area NW of Century and Washington street are a good example of this. We built a building on Calgary N. of Menards which was supposed to have a full basement. During excavation we opened what I call an underground river as you could see the water flowing through on top of the clay layer. We ended up filling the area up with washed sand and the building ended up with a crawl space. To this day anytime I am at that business you can hear the underground water running into the parking lot storm sewer.
Galwhofishes and I installed our own interior drain tile (cut the slots with cement saw (duct is for the exhaust of that gas saw), jackhammered the slab into chunks, hauled that out, hauled the trench clay out, installed drain piping, added a monster pit on one end (arrrrg), hauled all the pea rock down, all the cement, yadda.I believe it the summer of 93 when that area really took a hit. East bismarck north Divide is another one. I worked on a few unexpected remodels later that year. I understand it’s lots of fun hauling five gallon buckets of concrete up basement stairs.
Shit is expensive. LiterallyFYI, I replaced our 3/4 HP commerical waste water pump for the septic system in 2018. Reciept shows $707. That pump recently started drawing to many amps and tripping my thermal breaker in the control panel, so I looked up a new pump this moring, .....$1,550! ouch...........
#Guywhothinks instead of just using his head for a hat rack.Galwhofishes and I installed our own interior drain tile (cut the slots with cement saw (duct is for the exhaust of that gas saw), jackhammered the slab into chunks, hauled that out, hauled the trench clay out, installed drain piping, added a monster pit on one end (arrrrg), hauled all the pea rock down, all the cement, yadda.
We had received bids - but it was like a year's wait and $10k (a lot in 2011).
I couldn't do that today but it's been dry/manageable since. Glad we did it!
No. Not for the average two-person team with hand tools anyway.would it have been easier to do this project on the outside of the house?
Dig around the outside, put in the pipe, then buried it all?
Almost non-stop. It’s exhausting.So you are a geek at work?
Night and day difference compared to the garden hose, past experience.Sump in the basement just started trickling on sunday.
Sump in the low point of the backyard normally pushes water out to the curb, during wet seasons, heavy rain, etc. That underground line is blown out in fall, and capped on the high end (street).
6 ft of snow and ice on my curb all winter. It's sunk down, but I can't get to that line to remove the cap, so ran a garden hose over the grass and snow, connected to sump and pump in the back yard. Pushes up only a couple of feet in elevation, but it's 150 ft long. Ran 24 hours straight, with no noticeable drop in the lake in my back yard.
Last night bought 150 lin ft of 1.25" black corrugated hose. Couple hours later, the lake was gone. Ran off and on all night. I finally got ahead of it!
Is JK running his over to yours at night?I got a 120’ siphon going using water hose to remove water from my backyard. Been running non-stop for 48 hours.