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Replacing old main drain pipe

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Replacing old main drain pipe Mail Man Bob 08-11-2007
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Posted by Mail Man Bob on August 11, 2007, 3:05 am
Old drain is at least 45 years old and has broken under a concrete slab and
roots get in and clog it up every 6 months. One estimate was for $3K,
which includes breaking a concrete patio, installing new drain pipe and
replacing patio.

There are 2 alternates that I thought about doing instead to keep from
breaking up the concrete....

1 - Slide a PVC pipe inside the old terra cotta pipe. Advantage is lower
cost, but it also makes the pipe diameter smaller.

2 - Re-route a new drain pipe around the patio. This would be my first
choice except that the only way is to go out 90 degrees from the original,
which means either two 90 degrees bends -- or 45 degrees if that is
available.

I posted a sketch the following newsgroup - the closest one I could find to
plumbing...

alt.binaries.pictures.woodworking



If anyone has experience with this kind of situation, I would appreciate
hearing a few words.



Thanks!



Bob





Posted by PeterD on August 11, 2007, 7:54 am

>Old drain is at least 45 years old and has broken under a concrete slab and
>roots get in and clog it up every 6 months. One estimate was for $3K,
>which includes breaking a concrete patio, installing new drain pipe and
>replacing patio.
>
>There are 2 alternates that I thought about doing instead to keep from
>breaking up the concrete....
>
>1 - Slide a PVC pipe inside the old terra cotta pipe. Advantage is lower
>cost, but it also makes the pipe diameter smaller.
>

There are commercial alternatives to fix this... Saw it just a few
weeks ago on one of the PBS shows, they use a liner with a polyester
or epoxy resin to line old drain/sewer pipes. They did a pipe from
inside the house with a hole at the other end, no lawn damage or
anything.

Sadly, I don't remember the name of the process, but it seemed to only
slightly reduce the ID of the line. Looked very viable!


Posted by aemeijers on August 11, 2007, 5:01 pm

> Old drain is at least 45 years old and has broken under a concrete slab
> and
> roots get in and clog it up every 6 months. One estimate was for $3K,
> which includes breaking a concrete patio, installing new drain pipe and
> replacing patio.
>
> There are 2 alternates that I thought about doing instead to keep from
> breaking up the concrete....
>
> 1 - Slide a PVC pipe inside the old terra cotta pipe. Advantage is lower
> cost, but it also makes the pipe diameter smaller.
>
> 2 - Re-route a new drain pipe around the patio. This would be my first
> choice except that the only way is to go out 90 degrees from the original,
> which means either two 90 degrees bends -- or 45 degrees if that is
> available.
>
> I posted a sketch the following newsgroup - the closest one I could find
> to
> plumbing...
>
> alt.binaries.pictures.woodworking
>
>
Yeah- bite the bullet and replace with PVC all the way from the cleanout
fitting in the basement, to the the street connection. It won't cost that
much more, you will never have to worry about it again, and you should make
a big chunk of it back if you sell the place. To anyone that has ever had a
main sewer line fail, a fresh line in a house they are looking at is a BIG
plus. That blown-in fabric/epoxy liner thing they showed on TOH only makes
sense, IMHO, in an old-urban setting where it takes weeks and a fortune to
get the permits and book the crews for a proper replacement. In a smaller
town, it is No Big Deal. Do it in next few weeks, and the grass patch should
get a good start before first frost. $3k, including replacing the concrete
flatwork, would be real cheap around here, unless the total run is real
short. I'd definitely get more estimates, and probably take the middle one.
It is a couple days of work for several guys using some expensive hardware,
so it adds up quick.

aem sends...



Posted by Dave in Houston on August 11, 2007, 8:06 pm

> Yeah- bite the bullet and replace with PVC all the way from the cleanout
> fitting in the basement, to the the street connection.

You should bear in mind that the city sewer "tap" may be as deep as six
feet which amounts to a serious trenching job.
On our current room addition project we opted to route the PVC from the
new bath to connect with the existing house-to-city sewer (under the back
alley in this instance) since the city sewer was almost eight feet down!
--
NuWave Dave in Houston



Posted by J.A. Michel on August 11, 2007, 10:05 pm

>
>> Yeah- bite the bullet and replace with PVC all the way from the cleanout
>> fitting in the basement, to the the street connection.
>
> You should bear in mind that the city sewer "tap" may be as deep as six
> feet which amounts to a serious trenching job.
> On our current room addition project we opted to route the PVC from the
> new bath to connect with the existing house-to-city sewer (under the back
> alley in this instance) since the city sewer was almost eight feet down!
> --
> NuWave Dave in Houston

My city sewer is 11ft down. I've got a 1/2 bath and a floor drain in the
basement
drained by gravity.


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