T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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150.1 | Could always advertise as basement swimming pool | FURILO::BLESSLEY | | Fri May 02 1986 12:55 | 33 |
| What you describe sounds fairly typical for an "aftermarket" solution.
I have both situations - a drainage system and sump pump, and a
leaky basement - in two different sections of the house. That is,
the main house has drainage lines and the pump, and has never flooded
(I worry when there's a lot of water and a power failure!).
If you've identified the origin of the water (coming in at the base
of the slab from one or more sides of the foundation), you have
two choices: 1) stop if from getting to the foundation so there won't
be water to seep in, 2) try to block it.
If the problem is little more than moisture, then inside-house remedies
(paint-on kind, plastic-channel-at-the-corner kind) will sometimes
do it. A better tho much more difficult job is to dig out the
foundation at the outside and pour in sealant. (While you're
doing this, might as well insulate with some polystyrene...).
If there's a LOT of water, I've been warned about the possibility
that if you seal up the foundation too well, you run the risk of
damaging the foundation from the buildup of hydrostatic pressure
from all that water TRYING to find a new home. This is un-good.
Option "B" is keeping the water away from the foundation in the
first place. This means proper landscaping, and gutters where applicable
(that's my problem). These won't address ground water, just that
arriving at the base from other means.
I'm by no means an expert in this, just passing on what I've read/heard
/experienced. My back yard consists of 60 feet of lawn followed
by about 150 feet of wood hillside pitched at about 45 degrees.
-Scott
|
150.2 | Foundation keep-away... | JOET::JOET | Just like a penguin in bondage... | Fri May 02 1986 13:25 | 9 |
| I second the gutter solution.
Remember that not only do you have to collect the water, you have
to do something sensible with it.
Part of my tax refund this year is going for gutters, pipes, and
drywells.
-joet
|
150.3 | I dug the trench | HOW::WHITE | Willie White | Fri May 02 1986 16:39 | 34 |
| I fould that I have a high water tabel situation at my house (should
have guessed that with a pond across the street) and have been having
water come in between the footing and the base of the walls.
I opted for the trench method around the inside of the foundation
but considering the cost, decided to do it myself. There was no
sump pump, so the first thing I did was to put one in. Then at
least I could sweep the water over to the sump and get it out.
I rented a jackhammer and cut through about 75' of the inside permiter.
That is about half the distance I have to do, but it covered the
area where I was getting the worst seepage. This way I don't have
to have the whole cellar 'under construction' at once. Once I got
that concrete out, it appears to have reduced some of the water
pressure under the floor.
I put in 4" preforated drainage pipe pitched toward the sump and
covered with stone. I have yet to concrete over the trench but
when I do, I plan to leave a little ditch about the width of a 2x4
between the floor and the wall to a depth of the top of the footing.
I'll put some drains (pieces of flexible plastic pipe) from this
ditch into the stone so that any water that still finds its way
under the wall will be routed to the sump instead of all over the
floor.
I didn't have any problems with walls cracking from the vibrations
of the jackhammering. What kind of walls do you have? What condition
are they in? BTW, I used an electric hammer, and the floor was
only about 2" thick. A pneumatic hammer and/or a thicker floor
could cause more vibration, I suspose.
Good Luck!!
-willie white
|
150.4 | wet basements | KRYPTN::FINGERHUT | | Fri May 02 1986 17:27 | 5 |
| The solution I used was to buy a Wet & Dry Vac from Lechmere's
for $79.
It works well.
|
150.5 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | | Fri May 09 1986 12:01 | 19 |
| I'm trying to figure out a solution to a wet basement myself. So
far I've regraded part of the lawn so it slopes away (or at least
doesn't slope toward) the house, and that has helped quite a bit.
I've ended up with a "step" in that part of the yard, about 30'
away from the house, but I plan to build a stone retaining wall
and pretend it's a raised flower garden. I think if I put on
gutters it would take care of the rest of the problem, but at this
point I'm not sure where to drain the gutters to, so I'm waiting
while I think about that detail a bit more. The problem has never
been *really* bad; you may need more drastic solutions than I do.
If possible, I'd vote for digging down to the footings on the outside,
putting in crushed stone and perforated pipe, and draining the water
off from outside...assuming you have a place to drain it to. If
everything is pretty much uphill from your house, you have problems.
While you're at it, waterproof the outside of the foundation, put
on rigid styrofoam,...
Steve
|
150.6 | Landscape and Gutters | ONFIRE::PLEE | | Thu May 15 1986 21:19 | 18 |
| Thanks for your replies.
Re .1, .2, .5 I have gutters around the house, and they drain down
the side of the house and hopefully away from the house. Maybe I can
landscape it so that it slopes away from the house.
Re .3 I believe I may be in a midst of a high water table area
as well. I don't have the time, energy or confidence to undertake
the task that you've described, although I've thought about it.
He DID use a pneumatic hammer, and the concrete was between 2-4
inches thick.
Re .4 I also have a Wet & Dry Vac, but not from Lechmere, and yes it
does work.
Thanks for your help and support.
|
150.105 | Moved from old note 240 | ECAD::SCHIPANI | | Fri Jul 11 1986 23:13 | 9 |
| Just purchased home 18 yrs old in Nashua.
Here's problem. Whenever it rains, or when humidity is high,
I get water coming UP through the floor. The wall also weeps.
Mind you, not alot of water(1-2 gal)and only in one spot on the
floor(next to bulkhead) and about 10 feet of one wall from
corner to bulkhead.
n u
|
150.106 | the rest of question | ECAD::SCHIPANI | | Fri Jul 11 1986 23:21 | 14 |
| SORRY ABOUT THAAT. I was cut off on the phone line.
To continue, I've read that this is called ground water, and the
only real way to solve the problem is to dig that portion of the
foundation bare, water proof it, and lay gravel and a drain pipe.
My concern would be that the drain pipe would lead to the enterance
of the bulk head. Any suggestions?
thanks
Gary
dtn 223 8072
|
150.107 | LOCAL FIXES ARE BETTER.... | JAWS::AUSTIN | Tom Austin @UPO - Channels Marketing | Sat Jul 12 1986 17:14 | 25 |
| Before you assume it's a watertable problem, check a few other possible
sources of the problem, particularly since the water problem is
only in one part of the basement.
Do you have gutters on the house? Is there a downspout near the
water problem? If so, you may be able to make your problem disappear
by moving the sinking location for the output of the downspout.
To test this out, IF THE DOWNSPOUT IS WITHIN ABOUT 10 FEET of the
water problem, hook up a goodly length of 4"PVC pipe to the end
of the downspout and get the water away from the house (pref to
a lower elevation). Downspouts can cause problems even when it isn't
raining cause they saturate the soil in the area where they discharge
their water.
I'm certain other notes will come up with other local (non-water
table related) causes of water problems to check out (like NOT having
gutters) before you assume you have a water table problem and have
to waterproof your external walls. The 'local' causes are a LOT
easier to fix even though the extreme remedies will cure the simple
problems as well. The extreme remedy (dig up the foundation and
waterproof) is NOT a permanent fix, usually requiring redoing every
several years. The 'local' problem fixes, if they're appropriate,
can be permanent. Thus, they're not only easier, but longer lasting.
Bon chance! And let us know what you find...
|
150.108 | Sump Pump help ? | TONTO::EARLY | Bob_the_hiker :^) | Sun Jul 13 1986 19:52 | 21 |
| I hate to be this way, but when I lived in Nashua during 1968-1977
(your house time frame), there was one prominent contractor (now
bankrupt) who would put a house wherever he could find a dry spot
AT ANY TIME OF THE YEAR; which is why some places in Merricmack
have above ground septic systems.
It is remotely possible that your house might have been built
over a Spring (like my sisters house was in Merrimack in 1959).
I don't have a weeping problem in my cellar; the water "flows" freely
so much that the previous owner built a sluiceway from the back
wall , to the drain outlet at the front of the foundation, and
channelled the output on the other side to an adjacent hillside.
(It may also be the old well overflowing, too, that's under the
kitchen). Would a sump pump be an acceptable solution to your
problem ? One of my friends from Merrimack had two sump pumps, and
was considering a third as a spare (when one broke).
bob
|
150.109 | Think twice about the pump. | MAY11::WARCHOL | | Mon Jul 14 1986 17:29 | 10 |
| I'd stay away from the sump pump if at all possible. Once you have
that hole in the floor you're obligated to keep it pumped out.
Otherwise you'll have more water than ever. Having a power failure
is no fun to sump pump owners, that basement can fill fast.
Do check the gutters and downspouts first. Also make sure that the
land slopes away from the house to keep the water away from the
foundation.
Nick
|
150.110 | ex | ECAD::SCHIPANI | | Tue Jul 15 1986 19:56 | 8 |
| Thanks for the advice. I have no gutters, and land flows to back
of house. Interesting. Bought a dehumidifier this weekend, ran it
while it was raining, got 40 pins of water, but nothing leaked.
I;ll see what can be done about landscapping.
thanks
gary
|
150.111 | ANother solution that WORKED for this case | TONTO::EARLY | Bob_the_hiker :^) | Wed Jul 23 1986 21:14 | 37 |
| Another thought about water problem. When I lived in my last house
the back of the cellar was "on grade" , which gave a walki in cellar,
and the land sloped DOWN from the back to a fairly deep ravine
in back of the house; but we still got water in the cellar.
It seemed to be coming in around the bottom of the glass slider
door during a heavy rain.
What we did to solve it (year round solution):
Dug a three ffot deeep trench across the back of the entryway, and
sloped it toward the ravine , and into the edge of the ravine
(about thirty feet through sandy clay. made a great ditch.).
Lined the trench nearest the housse with porous plastic pipe made
for trenching (lots of holes), and ran additional "holey" pipe
to the ravine.
We then filled to about 1/2 up the side of the piping with
"pea" gravel (about 1/4" - 1/2" size), and covered tehrest of the
pipe with 18" of "track rock" (about 1 1\2 " dia stones), then
backfilled this with lose sand, except near the house and filled
to the top with crushed stone.
Over the sand we laid good loam, and the sod patches we had saved
from the trench.
The depth gave some protection from freezing in winter; all that
rock acted as a "dry well" if the end did freeze; and the "well"
part near the house got some waste heat from the cellar floor (solid
concrete makes a great "heat" mass !
That ended that "watery" cellar problem. Unfortunately, I only
got to try it for one year, because when I moved I had to leave
it all there :^) .
bob
|
150.114 | Wet spot on floor - moved from note 277 | STOWMA::ARDINI | From the third plane. | Wed Jul 30 1986 12:10 | 12 |
| I just moved into my new home (not a new house-45 yrs old) and
discovered a problem, wet spot in the basement. The basement is
finished with wall-to-wall carpet, panelling ect. What I found
was a wet spot on the floor where the carpet is soaked only in this
one spot (2'by2'). The spot is in the middle of the floor not running
to any walls. What I would like to know is if this is from a crack
in the floor below can I just patch the crack or will this cause
big trouble because of water pressure. It was been raining quite
alot lately and this side of the house has no gutters and has a
moss or green fungus growing on the foundation walls. Please advise.
Jorge'
|
150.115 | this may be obvious, but... | MENTOR::LEITZ | gimmee those wanton voodoo drums | Wed Jul 30 1986 15:15 | 11 |
| I'm sure this is a stupid question, but for clarification:
Did you look up?
I just replaced 6 feet of old copper pipe which had pinholed
in 5 places, resulting in little patches of wet carpet just as
you describe.
Assuming it's not that...it sounds as if you're in a very humid
area since you have growth on the exterior of your foundation.
In any event...I can't respond to whether a patch in the flooring
would do the trick if there's a crack. Somebody else?
|
150.116 | everybody outa the pool! | GUMDRP::HAFFNER | | Thu Jul 31 1986 17:44 | 7 |
| Just a thought....
Have you looked under the carpet? Floor drain?
At my house, when there is heavy rain, and the street drains are
clogged, water will bubble up thru the cellar floor drain.
|
150.117 | Moved from old note 665 | KELVIN::RPALMER | Handyman in Training | Mon Dec 22 1986 17:59 | 10 |
| Water, water everywhere and especially in my cellar. I assume that
since two other notes today were dedicated to water problems that
I was not the only person with my finger in the dike last Friday.
Ok, confess, how many others had water related problems due to fridays
storm? My friends sump pump went south while she was at work and
came home to find 3-4 inches of water in the basement. She had
just moved everything to the basement the night before to make room
for the plaster person. :^(
I was real depressed last Friday until I played 'Noah' by Bill
Cosby. What is your water story?
|
150.118 | | BPOV09::SJOHNSON | Steve | Mon Dec 22 1986 19:23 | 14 |
|
Mine is just an annoying accumulation of water which seeps in through
small openings at the corner of the foundation (where the concrete
wall and floor come together.) I've patched with hydraulic cement
once so far, and it works, but now the annoying bit of water comes
in in different locations, so I have more patching to do.
Also, I have a concrete water trough at the edges of the floor,
which is supposed to channel any leaks to the drain hole. I guess
this was popular in older houses. I don't see them in newer
construction. problem is that they develop leaks TOO!
Steve
|
150.119 | Fieldstone foundations piss me off... | JOET::JOET | | Mon Dec 22 1986 19:51 | 9 |
| The sump that I have set up all the time worked just fine. As a
matter of fact, as of last night, it was still going! (My property
abuts a pond and the pipe that goes under the neighbor's driveway
has less capacity to drain the pond than God does to fill it up.)
My workshop (which doesn't have a pump installed yet, had 5 inches
of water in it that morning.)
-joet
|
150.120 | | HOW::WHITE | Willie White | Tue Dec 23 1986 13:00 | 31 |
| I woke up to find my sump pump running like mad but I still had
an inch or so of water. I did a little investigating and found
that end of pipe for the pump which I had going into a brook was
now under water. The brook was running much higher than normal
because of all the runoff from a hill and a lot of debris further
down stream.
I've been having water problems in my basement since I bought my
house a year and a half ago. It appears that I have a very high
water table and now that the ground is saturated, any amount of
rain causes water to come in between the footing and the base of
the wall. So I installed a sump pump ( the house is 13 years old
and *never* had one!) and have been putting in drain tile around
the inside of the foundation. I've done about three-quarters of
the way around so far and it's working quite well. I'm doing the
last of it now where I have to tunnel under the hot water tank and
some other things (no fun).
After I dug the ditch, put the drainage pipe in, covered it with stone,
I covered the stone with plastic and poured concrete to patch the
floor. Before I poured the concrete, I placed lengths of 2x4s along
the top of the footing so as to leave a trough next to the wall. In
the side of the trough I placed some drains about every 5 feet made
with 1/2" flexible tubing going down through the stone into the drain
pipe.
So now when the water comes in under the wall, it stays in the
trough and gets channeled into the drain pipe and into the sump.
Next spring I'll check into cleaning out the brook and possibily
digging it down deeper with a backhoe.
|
150.121 | Moved from old note 819 | AIMHI::GOETZ | | Fri Feb 20 1987 16:39 | 13 |
| While I'm not 100% sure, it sounds like you might have a very high
water table, and the heavy rains/snow melt just pushes the table
up through your floor (foundation).
If that's the case, I don't think a sealer would help.
I hope my thoughts are wrong. I used to live in a (rented) house
that had a large crack in the basement floor and a high water table.
It was no fun bailing where there were low spots that didn't drain
to the sump pump.
Good luck.
|
150.122 | Check the cheap solutions first | KELVIN::RPALMER | Half a bubble off plumb | Fri Feb 20 1987 18:19 | 16 |
|
The toughest part is figuring out the source of the water.
I had a clogged gutter on one end of my house that caused water
in the other end, 30' away. Before you do anything drastic check
out the simple and cheap solutions. Are the gutters clear? Do
the spouts dump 3' away from the foundation? Is the land sloped
so that water AWAY from the house?
If these fail you have to main choices, Dig up around the outside
of the foundation and add drains and gravel, or add a sump pump.
Sealing the inside of a leaky wall will not do much good.
My folks just bought a place that had drastic methods used to keep
water out. The PO had the floor broken up, drain pipes added and
*three* sump pumps installed. It keeps the water out but cost him
$5000 to have it all installed!
=Ralph=
|
150.123 | HIGH WATER TABLES ARE A PAIN!! | POWPAC::SNOW | | Tue Feb 24 1987 12:49 | 13 |
|
I have the same problem, plus an additional one. My house is
about 65 yrs old, with a field stone basement. Every spring the
water table comes up and my sump pump gets a real workout for about
three weeks. About 95% of this water is coming up through the floor.
On the rare occasion when my pump died or was accidently shut off,
I have found from 1 1/2 to 2 feet of water in the basement. My other
gotcha is semi-porous walls. I do get a fair amount of seepage during
hard rains or saturated soil. But I think a lot of that is due to
the fact that there are no gutters on the house yet.
Dan
|
150.124 | under floor drainage? | FROST::SIMON | Mister Diddy Wah Diddy? | Tue Feb 24 1987 17:21 | 11 |
|
I had the same problem right after I built my house. Fortunately
I still had a dirt basement floor so I was able to put in some
underfloor drainage to let the water out (spring in one corner
of the basement during high water season) before I had the concrete
poured. This probably wouldn't be what you would want to do
unless you like the idea of ripping up your concrete floor.
oh well,
-gary
|
150.179 | Moved from old note 893 | CORONA::PMCCRAW | | Tue Mar 17 1987 23:51 | 40 |
|
I purchased a new home (new construction) about 7 months ago.
Its on a hill. After the large rain storm we had in December
the basement started to leak. The water is leaking into the
basement where the walls meet the basement floor. Its only
leaking on the wall on the uphill side, the rest is dry. I'm
getting about 3 gallons a day. Naturally while the ground was
frozen I did not get any water at all. But with the thawing in
the last couple of weeks the leaking has started again.
I've contacted the builder since it is guaranteed to be dry for
one year, he has proposed the following solution inside the
basement which I do not like.
1.) Trench the flooring next to the leading wall.
2.) Put drainage pipe in and fill in with stone.
3.) Route the drainage pipe to a sump pump (ugh!!)
In talking to the builder I found out that he only sealed the
outer walls, but did not put any drainage in around the
foundation.
The builder is currently bringing different contractor's by
to get there solutions. They all seem to be recommending the
sump pump idea which I feel will devalue the house.
I've proposed to the builder that he place drainage in on the
outside at the base of the foundation along the leading wall
and route the drainage pipe to a dry well. Cover the pipe with
about three feet of crushed rock. And back fill the rest.
I believe this will solve the problem by channeling the water
away from the leading wall.
Any comments on this technique? Will it work?
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Pete McCraw
|
150.180 | Make him do it right! | KELVIN::RPALMER | Half a bubble off plumb | Wed Mar 18 1987 11:16 | 17 |
|
First off, I'm no expert on the subject. I had some water problems
last fall and was able to solve them by paying close attention to
my gutters.
I agree with your solution. If you have water in the basement
the only way to fix it right is to stop the water from coming in
in the first place. Sump pumps and channels in your cellar will
manage the water problem but not stop it. Have him dig up around
the foundation and lay the drain pipe like he should have done in
the first place. (By the way, how much do you think he saved by
not putting in the pipe?)
Your guarantee calls for a *dry* basement. Letting the water
come in and then pumping it out does not make it a dry basement.
Make him do it right (like he should have in the first place)
=Ralph=
|
150.181 | keep at it! | MIZZEN::DEMERS | No NeWS is Good NeWS | Wed Mar 18 1987 11:21 | 14 |
| Like everything else, you have to be more of on expert on the subject
than the person you hire. This way you can waste your valuable
time checking and rechecking the work, looking for sleazeball skimps
and other "money saving" ideas.
I'd love to have a house built. These kinds of problems are what
make me nervous.
I sympathize, recommend that you stick to your guns, and go to court
if necessary. The builder will try to wear you down. Remember,
his reputation is what gets him business. You can make his life
miserable too.
C
|
150.182 | Natural Drainage Solution | USSCSL::PASCUCCI | | Wed Mar 18 1987 12:45 | 9 |
| Avoid the sump pump.
1. Being not in use for most of the year they tend not to work
when needed.
2. Electric = Power Failure = wet basement!!!
Good luck with the builder.
|
150.183 | Count your blessings. | VAXINE::GUERRA | | Wed Mar 18 1987 14:58 | 15 |
| You are lucky that your builder is at least acknowledging the problem
and offering solutions (however cheap and ineffective) in a prompt
manner. We have been living in our house for almost two years. We
had a wet basement for a year before I could get my builder, P.&S.
Associates in Charlton, Mass., to take a look at it. What he did
was a sloppy cheap job on the base of the bulkhead where the steps
meet the floor. Needless to say, we are getting water in again with
the snow melting around the foundation. I think this time I'll find
myself a good lawyer. I am sworn to, at least, make him get a heart
attack for all the agravation we have been put through during the
last two years. This may sound awful to some, but if you owned my
house and knew of all the other places where water is seeping in,
you would be tempted to do the same. Does anyone know of a good
lawyer in the Worcester area? Maybe Ralph Nader would like to get
into this sector of consumer problems.
|
150.184 | It so easy to fix it before the fact!!! | QUEST::PMCCRAW | | Wed Mar 18 1987 15:18 | 17 |
|
I do not see how the builder could confidently put a clause like
a dry basement for one year in the P&S if he did not even put any
drainage in around the foundation. I know I would'nt sleep easy
for that first year if it was me.
The sad part about it is, that it would have cost next to nothing
to place drainage in before the flooring and walls where poured,
now its a major headache to fix the problem.
I would recommend a lawyer and get the guy to fix it once and for
all.
Thanks for the info.
Pete
|
150.185 | Stick to your guns | RATTLE::GOODIE | Jim Goodie | Wed Mar 18 1987 17:01 | 29 |
| I have an identical problem, house on a hill, water coming in on
the hill side only when we have a heavy rain or when the snow melts
in the spring. As a matter of fact it is coming in now. The advantage
you have is that you builder is going to do something about it.
Mine went bankrupt two months after I bought it. There went all
of my guarantees.
Being cheep I put in a sump pump. I don't recommend it. I don't
know how many nights I have stayed awake wondering if the pump was
going to stay going. A couple of time it didn't and I ended up with
a wet basement. Not a lot of water, but definitely a pain in the
a**.
To dig it up around the footing on the on side of the house and
run it away from the house will cost about $2K. (I had two extimates).
That is too expensive for me. Remember, I said I was cheap.
What I am going to do is rent a walk behind cement saw and cut
a trench just inside the basement wall. I am then going to run this
out the other side of the house, the down hill side, and run it
to an open pipe on the side of the hill. Then when the water comes
in rather than go on the floor it will just go right out and down
the hill like it should.
In your case, have the builder stop the water from coming in. The
dry well will work but make sure it is well away from the house.
GHood luck, Jim.
|
150.186 | Builder??? Of swimming pools??? | WELFAR::PGRANSEWICZ | | Wed Mar 18 1987 17:03 | 13 |
| Hell Pete don't let him fix it!!! Ask him for a diving board for the
basement instead. It's amazing what some contractors will try to
get away with. "I cheaped out and didn't put in adequate drainage
so let me destroy your brand new basement floor for you." There's
only one right way to fix it, but hundreds of wrong ways.
Isn't drainage of this sort almost standard building practice around
these parts or do you have to ask for it? Is there anyway of finding
out if drainage of this type is already installed in a pre-built
house you are considering buying, without relying on the builder's
word?
Phil
|
150.187 | code ???? | RSTS32::BROWN | | Wed Mar 18 1987 18:45 | 7 |
| I think reply .7 is close...Phil you ask is there a standard building
practice for this sort of thing..Maybe if Pete went to the Building
inspector (if none try closest town) and asked them what the code
states. I know towns vary but maybe this is a possibility. I put
in a addition with a full cellar last year and it was a milestone
inspection point to be witnessed and approved by the B.I.(Merrimack
NH)
|
150.188 | | USMRM2::CBUSKY | | Thu Mar 19 1987 11:58 | 17 |
| Foundation drains is one of the inspection points here in Sterling
Mass as well.
Here they want foundation drains covered with crushed stone then
a layer of tar paper before backfilling. The tar paper is to keep
the silt and mud from washing into the stone and pipe and clogging
up the works.
Interesting side note and where many builders probably sneak by
code. When it was time to backfill my new addition last year, I
called the Building Inspector's Dept. 3 times over the course of 4
days to notify them that I was ready for an inspection. Still no
building inspector so I told my excavator to go ahead and backfill.
It's been three months now and still no building inspector.
Charly
|
150.189 | can i have more particulars? | CHAPLN::ROSENTHAL | Out to break Murphy's Law! | Thu Mar 19 1987 15:22 | 10 |
|
Please tell me who your builder was/what town you live in.
I'm in the process of buying a home under construction and
suddenly have a sneaky feeling it's the same builder/neigh-
borhood...
thanks.
donna
|
150.190 | two solutions | SCOTCH::GRISE | Tony Grise | Fri Mar 20 1987 16:03 | 23 |
|
There are two correct ways to solve this problem.
You can, as you said, excavate around the house. When doing
this make sure that you excavate down to the base of the
footing. Then lay 3" of crushed stone down. Lay perforated
PVC pipe, ( this is better than the black flexible drainage
pipe) on the crushed stone. Put another 6" or more of crushed stone
over the pipe. Cover with a tar paper then backfill. You must
also excavate a trench that slopes away from the house. Make
sure that you start level and slope downward.
You could also cut a trench in the basement floor around the
perimeter and tunnel under the footing. Use the same method
as above except cover the layer of crushed stone with cement.
If the floor is refinished correctly, you shouldn't be able
to tell the difference. This my be more $$$ than the above
solution it will save your lawn and/or shrubs if that is
a concern.
Tony
|
150.191 | More particular's | QUEST::PMCCRAW | | Fri Mar 20 1987 16:43 | 15 |
| The town is Milford.
The builder does not build houses for a living he's an electrition.
This was the first house that he built by himself, he used to help
other builder's before. He's building one house currently in I believe
in Hopkington.
I very statisfied with the rest of the house he did a very good
job except drainage in the basement.
My only recommendation is that your P&S has a clause gareenting
a dry basement for one year. Don't let them put a clause in that
surface water is ok make sure it states a WATER FREE BASEMENT.
Pete
|
150.192 | insulation instead of tar paper? | CLUSTA::MATTHES | | Fri Mar 20 1987 17:21 | 6 |
| I've never done it yet but seen others.
Instead of tar paper over the top layer of gravel, use a thin layer
of fiberglass insulation. This keeps out the silt but allows drainage
through the fiberglass. This may be prohibitively expensive and
probably was done to get rid of scrap insulation he had laying around.
|
150.193 | | BEING::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Fri Mar 20 1987 17:32 | 6 |
| > -< insulation instead of tar paper? >-
I think most builders use straw, about 2-3 inches thick. Two bales, at about
$3 a bale, will do a whole house. It doesn't rot because it has no air supply.
Paul
|
150.194 | sealing from the outside | RATTLE::GOODIE | Jim Goodie | Thu Mar 26 1987 13:07 | 20 |
| I had a sales person from Basement Waterproofing Nationwide out
of Newton Junction, N.H. come to my house last night to look at
my basement water problem. He uses a system where they drill a hole
in the ground on the outside of the house and then pump Bentonite
into the ground, under pressure, to "set up an environmentally safe
and sure barrier of protection."
This system comes with a "written transferrable guarantee" that
I will no longer have any water problems in my basement.
The cost is $25 per foot and it is only inserted where you are having
problems. Withe my house it is only on one wall so it is under $1K.
I talked with some contractors about trenching around just that
side of the foundation and running it away from the house and they
gave me a price of about $2K so this sounds pretty good.
Has anybody heard or used them before? Has anybody heard of this
method as it is new to me? I would appreciate any comments.
Thanks, Jim.
|
150.195 | I thought Bentonite wasn't good for foundations | VIKING::FLEISCHER | Bob Fleischer | Fri Mar 27 1987 15:48 | 11 |
| re note 893.15 by RATTLE::GOODIE:
> He uses a system where they drill a hole
> in the ground on the outside of the house and then pump Bentonite
> into the ground, under pressure, to "set up an environmentally safe
> and sure barrier of protection."
I thought that Bentonite was that clay that caused foundations to cave in
because it expanded when wet?
Bob
|
150.331 | Need some information on bentonite. | VOYAGE::PMCCRAW | | Thu Apr 02 1987 02:45 | 7 |
| Has anyone heard or had experience with using BENONITE as a water
barrier? I have water leaking into my basement and a salesman from
Basement Waterproofing Nationwide came out to my house to examine
the leak. He recommended a system where they pump BENONITE into
the ground and it forms a waterproof Barrier around the foundation.
Any seggestions, Ideas, Experiences?
|
150.332 | Already being discussed | CLUSTA::MATTHES | | Thu Apr 02 1987 14:19 | 6 |
| This topic has already come up in another note. I don't think there
are any answers yet though.
Try searching for BENONITE.
-f
|
150.333 | Try note 178 | JOET::JOET | | Fri Apr 03 1987 12:52 | 14 |
| The same question was being asked at 893.15 & .16, and 178.something
gives the definitive description of the substance. The correct spelling
is BENTONITE.
Seeing as how the other day, my two sump pumps couldn't keep up with
the amount of water coming through my fieldstone sieve, er foundation,
I'm particularly interested in any form of non-"dig up the house and
apply a rubber membrane" kind of waterproofing and #178 seems to be the
place to discuss it.
-joet
P.S. I've added WATERPROOFING as a keyword.
|
150.196 | Sump pump seems to be only solution!!!! | VOYAGE::PMCCRAW | | Tue Apr 07 1987 17:45 | 23 |
|
It seems that a sump pump is the only solution to the problem. The
builder has sent several contractor's by to inspect the problem
and they all recommend a sump pump. There rational is that if natual
drainage is put it there is no where to route the water. Unfortunally
there isn't any storm sewer's on the street. Apparently the area
that I live in is all Hard Pan (What's Hard Pan? Is it clay?) so
dry wells will not work, they'll just fill up according to the
contractor's.
I did have someone come by from Basement Waterproofing Nationwide with
a solution using BENTONITE just like note 893.15. This sound's like a
good solution but I'm afaid of what the Hydrostatic pressure would do
to the foundation.
I need to do something fast. The water is coming fast with this latest
rain (about 2" an hour). I rented a pump to keep ahead of it.
Any Suggestion's????
Thanks
Pete
|
150.133 | Moved from old note 987 | NATASH::MCGREAL | Pat McGreal | Tue Apr 07 1987 18:55 | 19 |
| I have read all of the notes in this conference regarding wet basements.
Mine has never had so much as a moist spot in the 30 years the house has
been around. (info from past owners and neighbors) The rain that we have
had in the past 4 days has left me as well as many others with 3-5 inches
of water in the basement. I am still unsure of the following questions.
1. Is excavation around the outside with sealent, crushed stone and drain pipe
a sure fire solution ?
2. Now that my basement has leaked for the first time will it be more
proned to do so in the future under less torrential conditions ?
3. Will I be forced to install a sump pump and drainage ditch inside the
basement and only treat the symptom not the problem ?
Please excuse me if I bring the subject up again for another vote.
thanks, Pat Mcgreal
Wet in Northboro
|
150.197 | I'd make the contractor try the Bentonite, then the sump pump! | YODA::BARANSKI | 1's & 0's, what could be simpler!? | Tue Apr 07 1987 19:45 | 0 |
150.134 | Wet basements | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Tue Apr 07 1987 19:49 | 26 |
| > 1. Is excavation around the outside with sealent, crushed stone and drain pipe
> a sure fire solution ?
I have my foundation sealed, and have crushed stone and drainpipe
around the perimeter, as well as 3 inches of water in my basement
now, so the answer is No. It helps, but I don't know if I'd spend
the money on a basement that leaked once in 30 years. No, wait..
I do know.... I wouldn't spend the money.
> 2. Now that my basement has leaked for the first time will it be more
> proned to do so in the future under less torrential conditions ?
I wondered about that too. 1000 gallons of water coming thru a
1/8 inch hole (Which is the case in my basement) is sure to make
the hole bigger.
> 3. Will I be forced to install a sump pump and drainage ditch inside the
> basement and only treat the symptom not the problem ?
That might be the best solution for a basement that only leaks once
every 30 years. Keep in mind that you might spend $2000 adding perimeter
pipe, only to find it still leaks. Meanwhile, you know that a sump
pump will work.
BTW, has spags run out of sump pumps yet?
|
150.135 | almost as good as the Blizzard of '78 | PSTJTT::TABER | Relax, the sun came back again. | Wed Apr 08 1987 12:54 | 16 |
| You'll grant that this was an unusual Winter/Spring, and that the
leaking was triggered by a week of rain coupled with heavy snowmelt. If
I were you, I'd identify the spots the water was coming in, put a little
hydraulic cement in the holes and practice telling the story of the time
I got the six inches -- no twelve inches -- no, no, the time the boiler
was completely submerged and we had to sleep in wetsuits -- back in the
Spring of '87.
I don't think the basement will be *more* likely to leak now. I think
that the hole the water came in has been above the water table for these
past 30 years. God willing and the creek don't rise, it'll stay above
the water table for another 30. But use the hydraulic just in case. Then
it'll have to get high enough to find the next hole.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
150.198 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Wed Apr 08 1987 13:27 | 4 |
| "Hardpan" is basically clay with a lot of rocks in it, with a total
range of sizes from dust to boulders. Totally impervious to almost
everything, including digging. The glaciers left the stuff behind
when they departed a few thousand years ago.
|
150.136 | use hydraulic cement | WHO::SHOREY | | Thu Apr 09 1987 16:05 | 11 |
| do not get a sump pump!!! if you ever decide to sell the house,
a prospective buyer will notice it right away, and there is no way
you'll ever convince him you bought it for one leak in 30 years.
go the hydraulic cement route. when i bought my house, there was
minor signs of water damage near a settling crack in the laundry
room. on saturday, water started coming in. i sealed the crack
monday with the cement, and it worked fine, although the water found
another place to come in.
total cost - $6.00.
|
150.137 | | BOEHM::SEGER | this space intentionally left blank | Thu Apr 09 1987 16:31 | 6 |
| For what it's worth, I've always heard that even if use use hydraulic cement,
to be effective you need to do it from the OUTSIDE or else it will eventually
leak. We have a couple of cracks in our foundation sealed this way from the
inside and sure enough, they leak.
-mark
|
150.138 | leaky wallls or high water? | HARPO::CACCIA | | Thu Apr 09 1987 16:45 | 9 |
|
Are you sure the "leak" is through the wallsor whatever? With all
this water standing aroung it may just be possible that the water
came in over a window or door sill or if you have a bulkhead around
the flashing. I discovered that the flashing around my plumbing
vent leaks.
For a once in thirty year leak I would not panic -- yet.
|
150.315 | The water table ??? | NATASH::MCGREAL | Pat McGreal | Fri Apr 10 1987 11:42 | 14 |
| Does anyone know anything about "water tables" ? The area in Northboro
where I live normally has a water table level that is below my basement
floor. Until now the house has never had water and is 31 years old.
I have the water in the basement under control but I have been running a
pump since 2:00 tuesday afternoon non-stop. There are about 5 places along
my basement wall where water is coming in.
How long should it take for the water table to get back down to a normal
level so that the water will not be coming into my basement ? I have noticed
that it is slowing down. The water level in my basement is holding steady
at 1/4".
Thanks, Pat.
|
150.139 | re .5 | NATASH::MCGREAL | Pat McGreal | Fri Apr 10 1987 11:49 | 5 |
| re .5> The problem is in fact from 6 leaks around the walls that I can see
water coming in. I wish it was as simple as loose flashing around
a window or door.
Pat
|
150.316 | | VINO::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Fri Apr 10 1987 12:09 | 23 |
| A water table is a level in the ground where more-or-less free flowing
water is found. Loosely defined, a water table is that level to
which you must dig before your hole starts to fill with water. A
pond shows the level of the water table in the earth surrounding
it.
Water tables rise in wet weather, and fall in dry weather. They
rise faster and fall more slowly in areas of poor drainage. If your
water table is close to basement level, and you have good drainage,
you will experience short periods of basement wetness during and
after a heavy rain. If the drainage is poor, the basement wetness
period will be longer because it takes longer for the table to fall
to its customary level. Also, a heavy rainfall in the spring, when
tables are normally high from snowmelt, is much more likely to bring
the table up to your basement than a heavy rainfall in the summer,
when tables are low from dry weather and heavy discharge.
Also take heart in the fact that central Massachusetts has seen
it's worst flooding in fifty years, which means that the water tables
have reached their highest points in that time. If your basement has
been dry for 31, you can reasonably hope for at least another 31 before
you go swimming again.
|
150.317 | Can Construction cause tables to change ? | ELWOOD::WEISBACH | | Fri Apr 10 1987 14:35 | 14 |
|
I heard that water tables can change if there is alot of
construction in an area and there is no longer any place
for the water to go.
In Northboro, Wesboro, Shrewsbury there has been ALOT of
construction. If it is true that the tables may change
based upon this theory then it might be worthwhile to
start complaining to the Selectmen about too much construction.
Does anyone know if it is true that the tables change ?
If so, do they change very much ?
|
150.318 | | VINO::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Fri Apr 10 1987 15:48 | 2 |
| Again, water tables depend much on drainage, and if the DEQE is
to be believed, construction can cause great changes in drainage.
|
150.319 | wells are the biggest factor | YODA::BARANSKI | 1's & 0's, what could be simpler!? | Fri Apr 10 1987 23:26 | 6 |
| The number of local wells will have a greater effect on the water table then any
other construction. Each well creates a funnel shaped lowering of the water
table around it. Your neighbor might drill a new well, and your well might
start running dry...
Jim.
|
150.140 | in search of a dry basement.... | BPOV09::SJOHNSON | Steve | Fri Apr 17 1987 12:50 | 15 |
| re .4
I used the hydraulic and got the same results, continued leaking.
Maybe the hydraulic has pores or something, and needs to be sealed
up with ANOTHER product, like Thompsons Water Seal??
Anybody used Thompsons? can it be used from the INSIDE?
Supposedly, Practical Homeowner did a test of several masonry water
sealant products, but you have to send away for it, they didn't
publish it in the magazine. Has anybody seen the results?
Steve
|
150.159 | Moved from old note 1349 | SMAUG::ZOLFONOON | | Thu Jul 23 1987 16:13 | 11 |
| We've just moved into a newly constructed house. I've noticed some
damp(and in humid day, even wet) spots in the basement. The foundation
is concrete.
Any idea as to what is the best way to deal with this problem. Is
it normal for concrete to be damp for some time? How long?
tx
Riaz
(if this topic has been discussed in this conference before, please
point me to the note)
|
150.160 | | AMULET::TAYLOR | | Thu Jul 23 1987 16:42 | 12 |
| Buy a dehumidifier........
Works for me.
Royce
|
150.161 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Thu Jul 23 1987 17:15 | 9 |
| Yes, this was discussed someplace else, I think. The problem may
be moisture coming out of the still-curing concrete, or it may be
just condensation from humidity in the air. If the concrete is
more than about 6 months old, it's almost certainly condensation
from humidity. Given the incredibly humid summer we've been having
(I assume you're in New England), it's no surprise. A dehumidifier
is the way to go. If you can install it so it drains into a sink
or floor drain, so you don't have to keep emptying it, it's a heck
of a lot more convenient.
|
150.162 | Not much of a problem | HPSMEG::LUKOWSKI | I need an 'AUX' for my stereo | Thu Jul 23 1987 17:21 | 13 |
| I had the same problem with moisture on humid days. The moisture
was condensing on the walls (roughly where they were 4 or so feet
below ground level) and running onto the floor. The concrete was
wet as far as three feet from the wall. I just waited for the humidity
to drop down and opened the windows. Result: Two days later it
was all dry and no longer musty smelling. This time around I closed
my windows before the extreme humidity started. Sooner or later
(ok...later) I intend to put up walls with insulation separating
them from the concrete. I expect/hope this will stop the moisture
from condensing.
-Jim
|
150.163 | | TOOK::CAHILL | Jim Cahill | Thu Jul 23 1987 20:34 | 8 |
| Quick way to tell where the moisture is coming from: tape a one
square foot piece of plastic to the floor, and leave it there for
24 hours. If after a day there's water under the plastic, the
moisure is coming from the concrete. If the moisure is above the
plastic, it's condensation from humidity in the air, in which case
I refer you to .1.
Jim
|
150.164 | Check This Also! | TRACTR::DOWNS | | Fri Jul 24 1987 12:32 | 5 |
| You might want to look around above the wet areas to see if there
are any cold water supply pipes. If there is chances are they are
sweating during these humid days. This fact alone can contribute
to alot of wet floors. Also I second a dehumidifier.
|
150.165 | Dehumidifier time... | DEBIT::RUBINO | | Fri Jul 24 1987 12:43 | 5 |
| We had the same problem when our condo was just built. A few months
of the dehumidifier and it dried right up. No problems since.
good luck,
mike
|
150.166 | Plant grass | NISYSE::MOCCIA | | Fri Jul 24 1987 13:22 | 6 |
| When I moved into a new new house last time, I had moisture on'
the walls and floor for the first summer, until the lawn was
established. After that, no more problems.
pbm
|
150.167 | how big ? | MSEE::CHENG | | Fri Jul 24 1987 19:19 | 4 |
| I have the same problem in my basement and the hosue is 30 yrs old.
I know its from humidity. The basement is about 28 x 38. How big
a de-humidifier will it need to do the job. How much water does
it collect per day ?
|
150.168 | The size you need | USWAV3::NEADIS | | Sat Jul 25 1987 23:14 | 7 |
| You should buy either a 48 or 50 pint dehumidifier. My basement
is about the same size and the dehumidifier removes that amount
in a 24 hour period of high humidity. Of course, you have to empty
the attached water container twice a day as it only holds 24 pints. I'd
second the suggestion of attaching a hose from it to a drain if
you have one. Expect to spend about $230 or more for this capacity.
Bruce
|
150.169 | You like Spags, I like BJ's | KELVIN::RPALMER | Half a bubble off plumb | Mon Jul 27 1987 12:15 | 9 |
| I just bought a 48 pint dehumidifier at BJ Wholesale in Salem (also
a store in Medford Ma) for $150. Also rig it up so that it drains
into a sink or directly into the septic system or you will be empting
the dish *all* the time.
Don't ask me about the time I set mine up to drain into the
washing machine stand pipe by pulling out the washing machine hose
then my wife ran a load of laundry. Thank goodness I have a wet/dry
vaccuum.
=Ralph=
|
150.170 | will one work | MSEE::CHENG | | Mon Jul 27 1987 12:26 | 7 |
| Will it work in a partitioned basement ? The basement is partitioned
into 3 sections. The left side ( 1/2 basement ) is the family room
and the other 1/2 is partitioned into 2 smaller section for storage.
The family room has a "door-size" opening as entrance/exit to the
other side of the basement. Will one humidifier work or do I need
to get 2 ?
|
150.171 | Water conservers info | TASMAN::EKOKERNAK | | Mon Jul 27 1987 12:50 | 9 |
| Or, if you like to conserve water, take the bucket every time it
fills, and use it to water your garden, houseplants, lawn, or even
to fill your steam iron. I grew up in a town that had a serious
water ban on, but I always had healthy flowers, all because of the
dehumidifier! I only wish there was enough to wash the car.
If only there was a way to save it to fill the humidifier in the
winter time...
|
150.345 | Fountain in foyer | RABBIT::JOHN | | Thu Sep 10 1987 18:09 | 10 |
150.346 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Thu Sep 10 1987 18:24 | 7 |
| Is your house built on a slab? What is under the foyer?
Is it "below grade", or at/above ground level? Just as a guess,
if the foyer is on a cement slab, a water pipe may be going through
it, and it may have started leaking. Since it doesn't leak all
the time, it may be a drainpipe. Maybe it happens only when somebody
takes a shower, or you do a lot of laundry?
|
150.347 | No pipes | RABBIT::JOHN | | Thu Sep 10 1987 18:54 | 3 |
|
The foyer is at ground level; a leaking pipe was our first thought,
but there are none even near that area.
|
150.348 | | HAZEL::THOMAS | | Fri Sep 11 1987 15:35 | 4 |
| Is the house built on a slab?
If so, do you have FHW radiant heat built into the slab?
|
150.349 | | RABBIT::JOHN | | Fri Sep 11 1987 19:33 | 6 |
|
It is a two story house built into a steep hill; the front half
of first story is living area on a slab. That is where the foyer
is. No FHW radiant heat is built into this slab. No water pipes
are there either. That is why we can't figure out where the water
is coming from.
|
150.350 | Water, water, everywhere? | HPSVAX::SHURSKY | Shoot 'em all, let God sort 'em out. | Fri Sep 11 1987 19:59 | 15 |
| We had a problem where the water was getting into the eaves, dripping
down inside a wall (for two stories!) and appearing on the first-floor
floor/wall.
Is the leak on an outside wall? Could it be a pipe in a wall above
(2nd floor) leaking down? Is your foyer cracked? How much water?
Did you have the problem when it was so dry this past (unfortunately
where did it go!) summer? Does the water appear in the middle
of the room?
It is unlikely that a spring suddenly appeared unless something
significant happened in your area. I have a civil engineering degree
and there are solutions to that problem even. They tend to be a
little expensive though. You have to find the water source first!
|
150.351 | We need some more info! | HPSVAX::SHURSKY | Shoot 'em all, let God sort 'em out. | Fri Sep 11 1987 20:18 | 21 |
| A few more questions. If you take a cloth and wipe up the water
can you see it bleeding up through the cracks? (how much flow and
how fast in other words) Where were the trees removed? Do you
have a basement under the part of the house cut into the hillside?
If so, is it dry, moist, wet? Is there any possibility it is coming
from anywhere but through the floor?
Here is one suggestion. Look outside where the trees were removed.
Were they close to the house? Has the grade of the land changed
such that the water runs toward the house? If so, it may puddle
by the house and take a given period of time to seep up to the spot
in the foyer, thus making it appear not to be correlated to rain storms.
The obvious solution is to grade the soil so the water immediately runs
away.
Where does the water from your roof drain? Into a sewer? Into
a dry well? This in consort with the trees being removed may have
something to do with the problem and may bear looking into.
Is the level of the foyer floor higher than ground level. How about
a picture?
|
150.337 | Sealing underground chamber | DELNI::MHARRIS | Mark Jay Harris, Term Srvr Mktg Mgr | Fri Nov 20 1987 17:05 | 44 |
| I had a problem last March with the water table in my area rising
above it's NORM and submerging my open frame pump.
The setup it shown below. Last March, the water raised to a point
above the pump (which is still 8 feet below ground level)
for about a month.
A sump pump did NOT work because the floor of this undergound
chamber is dirt, so the water comes in faster than 1 or more sumps
could pump it out.
cap
Ground Level ---- Ground Level
----------------------------| |------------------------------
| |
| |
+-----+ +-----+
| |
| | <---- WATER LEVEL (LAST MARCH)
| +----+ |
| ====PUMP| |
| " +----+ |
| " |
| " |
| " |
+---"----------+
" "NORMAL" water level
v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^ " ^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^v^
"
"
"
"
"
What I need to know is if there is any type of spray on waterproofing
(actually I can picture a thick foam), that would basically
seal the walls (which are cement block) and the floor so a sump
could keep up with any water coming in????
Spary foam?
Mark
|
150.338 | TRY LARGER SUMP PUMP | STRATA::LAMY | | Sat Nov 21 1987 04:17 | 19 |
|
SEALING THE WALLS OR FLOOR OF THIS CHAMBER WILL NOT SLOW DOWN THE
INCOMING FLOW OF WATER. ALL YOU WILL ACCOMPLISH IS CREATING
PRESSURE WHICH WOULD EVENTUALLY LEAD TO THESE WALLS OR THE FLOOR
CRACKING. IF I UNDERSTAND YOUR DIAGRAM CORRECTLY YOU HAVE A SUMP
PUMP IN AN UNDERGROUND CHAMBER. IS THIS IN YOUR BASEMENT? IF SO
THEN SEALING THE CHAMBER WILL MERELY DIVERT THE WATER TO ANOTHER
AREA WHERE IT CAN FLOW WITH LESS RESISTENCE. WATER HAS A STRANGE
WAY OF FINDING THE EASIEST ROUTE INTO YOUR HOME. THIS WOULD LEAD
TO A WET BASEMENT AND EVENTUALLY A CHAMBER WHOSE SEALED WALLS
WILL LEAK. I WOULD RECOMMEND A LARGER SUMP PUMP WITH MINIMAL
DISCHARE OF 1-1/2 INCHES. YOU DON'T WANT TO RESTRICT THE FLOW
OF THE WATER YOU PUMP BECAUSE IT WILL JUST OVERWORK YOUR PUMP.
SEE NOTE 1516.7 AND YOU WILL GET AN IDEA OF HOW MUCH I KNOW
ABOUT THIS BUSINESS. IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS FEEL FREE TO SEND
ME MAIL AND WE'LL SEE IF WE CAN GET YOUR PROBLEM SOLVED.
WHERE ARE YOU LOCATED?
|
150.339 | Sealing material needed. | DELNI::MHARRIS | Mark Jay Harris, Term Srvr Mktg Mgr | Mon Nov 23 1987 12:38 | 15 |
| No, this is a chamber that was built out in the yard to house the
actual drink water shallow well pump. The sump pump I propose will
be added later. The chamber shown is about 4 feet in diameter and
about 7 feet high. It is right at the edge of my property.
(the water comes in much faster than 1 or 10 sumps with 1-1/4"
fittings can handle, mainly (I think) becuase the floor of the
chamber is JUST DIRT. The walls have some leakage, but the floor
is the biggest source)
I am thinking of putting a cement layer on floor and then sealing
walls and floor. hence, what should I seal with?
Mark
|
150.340 | try this | STRATA::LAMY | | Tue Nov 24 1987 07:11 | 9 |
|
I would recommend pouring a 3-5" floor using regular cement. Then
after it has dried sufficiently you could put a thin layer (1 in.)
of hydrolic cement over this floor as well as the existing walls.
Be sure to put enough hydrolic cement along the seams where the
walls meet each other and the new floor. I hope this helps some
what but my experience has been mainly with basement waterproofing
so i can only offer you this suggestion and you can take it from
there. Good luck!!!
|
150.7 | High Risk Waterproofing Decision | PARITY::KLEBES | John F. Klebes | Wed Dec 16 1987 13:56 | 75 |
| I have a rather difficult decision to make and could use some
advice. I need to know the best way to approach a basement water
problem in order to begin finishing my basement.
Background:
I recently moved from a large house in upstate NY to a small
ranch in Kingston NH. I need to finish the basement as soon as
possible to provide more room for my kids but since I just bought
the house I have very little money! I want to do a good job but
I am concerned that I may have a water problem. Ideally I would
like to wait till the spring thaw to determine the severity of
the water problem but I must finish the basement now. Any ideas
on how I can insure a sound construction short of major inside or
outside excavation type waterproofing?
Since I have only occupied the house for about a month and a half
I can not be certain of the severity of the problem. During a
three day heavy rain storm a few weeks ago I did notice two small
damp spots on the floor. One was right under a patched crack in
the foundation wall(the patch is cracked also) and the second was
in the middle of the floor about 6 feet from the wall crack. The
damp spots disappeared within 8 hours.
The previous owner stated on the sellers statement that the
basement was dry with a footnote "except during heavy rain". When
questioned she stated that it was only once and during a very
sever storm last spring. The following is an excerpt from the
home inspection I had performed:
"The monolithic pour concrete foundation system has no cracks of
structural concern. It is not uncommon for cracks to occur in
poured foundations due to settlement and/or frost movement. The
absence of deflection in the wall system indicates that there is
not a structural problem at this time. However it should be
noted that cracks of this type may allow seasonal water entry
unless properly sealed. There was evidence of active water entry
in the basement at the time of the inspection. There is no sump
pump for water removal. A sump pump is suggested for water
removal".
My Observations and first cut plan of action:
There are no gutters so I thought that would be my number one
priority - add gutters. Secondly there are landscape ties
forming planting rectangles around the outside of the foundation.
My thoughts are that these landscape ties funnel the water
toward the foundation and should be removed. The house is on a
hill and the ground slops away from the house so I am not
planning on any grading changes. The floor is poured flush with
the foundation and makes it difficult and expensive to install a
sump pump and drain system so I would like to avoid that route.
After adding gutters and removing the landscape ties I plan on
repairing the wall crack by chiseling a V grove and applying
hydraulic cement. It doesn't seem practical to chisel out the
fine cracks in the floor thou. I then thought I would apply a
sealer to the floor and walls (recommendations for sealers?). The
distance from floor to ceiling joists is about 94 inches so next
I plan on 2x4 or 2x3 pressure treated lumber with rigid
insulation, a vapor barrier on top?, then 3/4" sub-flooring. For the
walls I thought a standard 2x3 or 2x4 wall with Fiberglas
insulation that is kept 1/2" away from the concrete wall, vapor
barrier facing the concrete?, then sheet rock or paneling.
Your comments? My primary question is do you think my approach
will give satisfactory protection against water damage given the
high uncertainty of the severity of the problem? (I really don't
know if the problem is just run off or the water table rising?)
Any other suggested precautions I can take? Additional comments on
types of sealers to use, order of construction (floor or walls
come first?), and location of floor and wall vapor barriers would
be appreciated.
-JFK-
|
150.8 | Better drainage | SALEM::R_RAYMOND | | Wed Dec 16 1987 14:34 | 7 |
| RE .7
John,
Besides removing the landscape timbers you might also think
about putting in some drainage.....stones and pipe to make it easier
for the water to get away from the foundation.
Ric
|
150.9 | Major project to add external drainage? | PARITY::KLEBES | John F. Klebes | Wed Dec 16 1987 15:22 | 14 |
| Ric,
I thought of that, but... The footings are about 6 foot down.
My understanding was that the stone and pipe should be at the
footers. Sure sounds like a major project, especially in the
snow. Given the expense/time of this approach I probably will
go broke or not get to the basement at all this winter. Nether
option sounds good to me. The house is really too small for us
but it is all I can afford. If I Don't finish the basement
soon I think the kids will drive my wife craze.
Do you think I am taking to big a risk by not excavating?
-JFK-
|
150.10 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Wed Dec 16 1987 15:47 | 16 |
| Your idea of taking out the landscape ties is probably a good one.
Slope the ground right up to the foundation, so the water will run
off easily. A good layer of grass will help too, but you can't
get that on short notice. If the ground slopes away all around
the house I suspect you should be in pretty good shape. Gutters
would help even more, if you can drain those well away from the
house.
If at all possible, do those things and wait until Spring to see
how bad the problem is (or isn't) before going the backhoe and
drainage route.
n.b. the vapor barrier on fiberglass insulation goes toward
the HEATED (inside) surface, not towards the concrete. You
might want to put a sheet of poly against the concrete tho'.
I used styrofoam board in my basement (totally waterproof) and
avoided the problem altogether, but that is more $ than fiberglass.
|
150.11 | Vapor Barrier Sandwich? | PARITY::KLEBES | John F. Klebes | Wed Dec 16 1987 16:43 | 32 |
| Re: .10
I know I should wait till spring to assess the problem
but I need the space NOW! Unless others feel I am taking
to large a risk? The side of the house has a very good slope
so I don't feel I will have a problem draining the gutters well
away from the house.
About the vapor barrier:
I thought that sandwiching the insulation between two vapor
barriers was a no-no. My original thoughts were based on
utilizing the one-sided Fiberglas insulation that is presently
located on the basement ceiling as a no cost supply of materials.
Vapor barrier against the concrete wall to keep out the moisture
coming from the concrete wall. Should I reverse the vapor
barrier to be on the inside with only the wool facing the
concrete? Anyone have a better low cost solution utilizing my
potential supply of Fiberglas? (from previous notes in this
conference it sounds like there are many differing views on
the proper placement of vapor barriers)
The Styrofoam board sounds like a much better option.
I'll have to price the cost differential.
How does this sound:
1) studded wall spaced 1/2" from foundation wall
2) rigid Styrofoam insulation between joists
(can you attach the sides of the insulation to the joists?)
3) poly on inside surface of studs
4) drywall or paneling
-JFK-
|
150.12 | Design for flood tolerance | VIDEO::DCL | David Larrick | Wed Dec 16 1987 17:12 | 44 |
| John, the word "risk" keeps coming up in your questions. It seems to me
that there are two parts to assessing risk in this situation:
1. Determining the likelihood that the basement will flood, and with what
severity.
2. Determining the damage which any flooding would do in your finished
basement.
Most of the replies so far (and your followup questions) have addressed the
first point. The consensus seems to be that you're doing the right things,
but that waiting until after the spring thaw would be the only real test.
I don't think anyone is likely to tell you, "if you install gutters,
there's only a 20% chance your basement will be flooded in the spring".
Such a number would be pretty meaningless anyway.
The other point, though, is to plan for damage control. If you're going to
put rare books and priceless Persian rugs in that basement, then you'd be
foolhardy not to do a proper (i.e. expensive) waterproofing job. But if
you'll use, say, indoor-outdoor carpet, industrial-waste panelling, and
plastic furniture, what's the problem if you get an inch of water, other
than the short-term inconvenience? The basement is demonstrably dry most
of the year, so you're not risking year-round swamp dwelling. You need to
think about what you'll use the finished basement for, and how much
disruption you can stand for a week or two in the spring.
If you decide to build a flood-tolerant room rather than hoping for a leak-
proof foundation, you should consider the materials mentioned above, plus
such things as:
- plenty of built-in shelves and other raised storage, so things don't
get stored on the floor.
- raise the floors of any closets.
- any electrical wires, outlets, heaters, etc. should be installed well
above the floor. Use waterproof wire (type UF), and of course GFCI.
- use the styrofoam board rather than the fiberglass, especially in the
lower parts of the walls.
- install a dehumidifier permanently.
- provide excellent ventilation.
- make access panels for those places in the foundation wall that leak
right now, so you won't have to destroy your finish work when they
start to leak again.
Others?
|
150.13 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Thu Dec 17 1987 12:38 | 30 |
| I expounded at some length in this notesfile someplace about how I
insulated my basement with the styrofoam; basically, I glued the
styrofoam to the concrete with a structural adhesive, then glued
1/2" sheetrock to the styrofoam; after 3 (?) years, it's still doing
fine. Last time I checked (a couple of years ago) a 2'x8' sheet
of 2" styrofoam was about $10. It's a lot more expensive than fiberglass,
especially if the fiberglass is free, but when the special properties
of the styrofoam (e.g. it's totally waterproof) are particularly
atttractive it may be worth the extra $$$.
.12 has some good ideas, I think. I assume most of your foundation
walls are buried, so the bottom of the wall will stay about 55 degrees
anyway; the top is most critical for insulation, where it's exposed
on the outside. You can end the fiberglass about a foot above the
floor and probably never notice. However, you would probably need
to have the fiberglass more or less tight against the concrete or
all the cold air will spill down the concrete wall and out through
the 1' gap at the bottom. If you put a poly vapor barrier against
the concrete, putting the fiberglass against the concrete would not
be a problem; however, you also need a vapor barrier on the heated
side of the insulation (inside), and you really ought to ventilate
the insulation, somehow. The the "vapor barrier sandwich", as you
put it, has some problems.
Perhaps some other readers can offer some opinions on this idea:
put poly vapor barrier and 2x4 studs tight against the concrete,
with fiberglass in between ending about a foot above the floor.
The fiberglass's vapor barrier goes toward the inside (finished)
wall. Put a ventilating strip along the bottom of the finished
interior wall to let air into the cavity below the insulation, and
leave the top of the insulation exposed as well.
|
150.14 | | BEING::PETROVIC | If you don't do it, no one will | Thu Dec 17 1987 12:51 | 15 |
| If the walls aren't already painted with a thoroseal or drylok type
product, I'd suggest that as well. I'm building a darkroom in my
basement and over the course of the summer, the bare concrete walls seem
to cause abnormally high humidity in the cellar area. My dehumidifier
runs almost continuously throught the summer. I used the USG DryLok
brand, in white, and will be insulating with 1" rigid stryofoam board,
the actual wall built with studs and header/sole plates away from the
wall. If you choose to build the wall away from the concrete, use a
pressure treated 2X4 anchored firmly to the floor.
As to patching cracks, strive for a square-edged groove, not a V-groove.
The patching material may fall out over time.
Chris
|
150.15 | thoroseal it | SMURF::WALLACE | Life's a beach, then you dive! | Thu Dec 17 1987 15:44 | 6 |
| I agree with the thoroseal application. It is probably your best
bet right now, for keeping moisture out. It will be quick and
you can do it yourself with no expensive equipment and you'll be
able to be use the downstairs right away. Then, if you have any
more problems in the spring, you can get a backhoe and install
foundation drains.
|
150.16 | I'm hoping for a dry spring! | REGENT::MERSEREAU | | Thu Dec 17 1987 17:33 | 21 |
|
While we happen to be on the subject:
Could some of you with the Wet/Dry Vacs elaborate on their
functions, and do you have brand recommendations? Are they
similar to a "Shop Vac", and could I use one for "Shop Vac"
type activites (nails, staples, etc.)?
On the subject of digging trenches around the house:
The Time-Life book suggests digging a trench around the foundation
well below the ground level (~3 feet if possible), and putting
tar on the foundation (below the ground level) and placing
plastic over it, so that the plastic adheres to the wall and lines
the bottom of the trench. Then the trench is filled with gravel,
and topped with soil (which slopes away from the house). It
sounds pretty logical, but I am not crazy about the tar bit.
-tm
|
150.17 | I'm in a similar spot, I'd go for it... | 3D::WHITE | Randy White, Doncha love old homes... | Tue Jan 26 1988 15:35 | 39 |
| RE: < Note 150.7 by PARITY::KLEBES "John F. Klebes" >
Hi John-
This may be a little late, but what the heck. When we moved
into our house 4+ years ago we had a water problem, (our own little
canal/pond system in our basement), this was odd since we also are
basically on a hill with a good slope around the basement. In any
case we also had very bad gutters, when the water came inside one
very heavy storm we decided to replace them.
Anyways with the exception of very heavy high water volume
storms our basement is now dry. I have two leaks which will be
taken care of this spring. One is a 4" square hole through the
basement wall which is directly under one downspout, (this is a
cable exit for garage power) the other is a large horizontal crack
within 3 or 4 feet from another downspout. IT also happens that
both of these downspouts empty into hollows, i.e. the water pools
and then can drain near/through the foundation.
The solution to this is two fold seal the holes but also get
the water away from the house, 10 feet minimum is recommended. I
intend to use underground pipe, below the frost line just to carry
it off to a drywell. Check the Time/Life, Pop Mechanics etc. books
for information on drainage and dry wells.
If you have water pooling around the basement anywhere after
heavy storms these could be in your problem area, as to the gardens
I tend to think removing these will really make much of a difference
after all when they are planted the root systems will absorb a good
deal of any water that passes through.
Didn't mean to be so wordy, but I hope this helps make your
decision, personally I'd go for it but be conscious that once you
have gutters you have water concentrations at each downspout that
you have to deal with; Otherwise you could worsen your problem.
Good Luck Randy
|
150.18 | Old house with a fieldstone/dirt basement | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Sat Jan 30 1988 19:02 | 25 |
| We have a 200+ year old cape house with a field stone basemenent.
The floor is half poured concrete and half dirt. The house is
situated on ledge and in the spring the water table rises above
the level of the basement floor. The dug well that used to supply
the house with water shares a wall with the basement. (By this
I mean that the well was dug so that part of the stones that
line it are the stones that line the basement. When the water
level in the well rises above the level of the intake pipe it
flows directly into the basement.
The basement is ditched all around the inside walls and drain pipes
are burried there. We are currently in the process of digging up
the pipes and clearing them of blockages...they were no longer working,
and resetting them.
We do have a sump pump!
Should we replace the old pipe after we finish digging it up? It
appears to be sound but the ends do not fit tightly.
Is there anyone else who has delt with this kind of basement that
can give us any suggestions to improve the water problem?
(We do not have gutters yet but intend to install them this spring.)
Bonnie
|
150.19 | what kind of pipe? | YODA::BARANSKI | Our photons are *happy*, they hum! | Mon Feb 01 1988 11:36 | 7 |
| What kind of pipe is it? ceramic/clay about 2 feet long with holes in it? Are
the holes pointed up or down?
If I understand your description, you may want to add an overflow drain to your
well below the level of your basement.
Jim. :-)
|
150.20 | on pipe and overflow drains | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Mon Feb 01 1988 17:31 | 11 |
| The pipe is some kind of flexible material on a wire base with
little holes in the top. The people who put it in covered it
with dirt rather than gravel which is probably why it wasn't working
very well.
I have no idea how we could add an overflow pipe to the well..
my guess would be that we would have to get a back hoe in to dig
a trench down 10 feet or so and then run an overflow pipe in the
ditch, but we would have to let it drain into the road.
|
150.21 | | 28713::GORTMAKER | the Gort | Tue Feb 02 1988 00:41 | 1 |
| The holes should be down.
|
150.22 | | VINO::GRANSEWICZ | Auhhhhh, I've been slimed! | Tue Feb 02 1988 13:12 | 11 |
|
RE: .18
I wouldn't bother re-using the old stuff. 10' of PVC drain pipe
goes for $3.99 at most places. Sounds like the person who put it
in previously didn't know what they were doing. To repeat what
was said earlier, the holes face DOWN. Surround the pipe with crushed
stone and put something like tar paper on top of the crushed stone.
Then backfill. Good luck.
Phil
|
150.23 | | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Tue Feb 02 1988 14:09 | 3 |
| Thank you to everyone who answered.
Bonnie
|
150.24 | clay was in my father's house | YODA::BARANSKI | I no longer argue with fools | Tue Feb 02 1988 15:57 | 11 |
| RE: Bonnie
I thought this was an 'old' house... :-)
yes, the holes should face down... The previous installers probably thought
that the screen would do instead of gravel. (it won't)...
I suppose that the mortar/PVC combination pipe would be over kill, eh guys? Just
plain 4" diameter PVC?
Jim.
|
150.235 | Basement humidity - keeping it out? | CYGNUS::DARRYL | Making tomorrow yesterday, today! | Wed May 11 1988 15:34 | 27 |
| I have a few questions about humidity in the basement - the kind in the
air, not the kind that comes in during the spring thaw. I have checked
the keyword directories, but didn't find this particular subject
discussed much.
Many of the notes mentioned that during the spring and summer the
humidity level in the basement seems to increase a lot. Some replies
suggested dehumidifiers as the easiest 'band-aid' for the problem, but
I'm wondering if there are other alternatives closer to a cure. I have
used a dehumidifier for the last couple of summers, and get a gallon a
day for the weeks during peak humidity. Then during the winter it won't
even turn on for weeks at a time.
My home is about 10 years old, and has the standard concrete foundation
walls and floor. I'm wondering about the benefit of coating all the walls
with something like USG Drylok, or Thomson's Water Sealer, and the floor
with a rubber based deck paint. In addition to keeping the dust down, I
would think this should keep the basement humidity closer to a constant
level without the seasonal rise (or need for a dehumidifier?). This is
based on the assumption that most (>90%) of the humidity is coming
through the porous walls and floor - is this a correct assumption?
Has anyone done this before? Did it really work? Were you pleased or
disappointed with the results/effort ratio? Was the cost worth the
benefit? Are there other products or approaches to consider?
Thanx for your thoughts!
|
150.236 | keep the air moving? | CLOSUS::HOE | Colorado's the place to be. | Wed May 11 1988 17:18 | 5 |
| Keeping the air moving helps but at >90% humidity, even that hardly
helps.
cal who lives in dry colorado and have to humidify the house in
order to keep the furniture from drying out
|
150.237 | | PRAVDA::JACKSON | That's a surfboard, not a yacht | Wed May 11 1988 17:20 | 10 |
| I think you'll find that a large majority of the humidity is coming
not from the floors and walls, but from the air.
Those hot/humid days of July/August/September are always when the
humidity of my basement goes through the roof. I think the
dehumidifieris the only real solution.
-bill
|
150.238 | An Air-Lock...yeah... that's the ticket.. | MISFIT::DEEP | | Wed May 11 1988 17:51 | 43 |
|
Well... I tried to type this in once already, and the network crashed on
me... but here goes again...
Last time I tried to answer a question in here, I got torn to shreads...
But the wounds have healed a little, and the moderator has assured me that
you really are a good group of people, so here goes again... 8^)
(Armour up!)
re: .2 is right...
I doubt that the procedures you describe are going to do much to control your
basement humidity, and here's why...
Humidity in the basement is an airborne "contamination" caused by the fact
that warm air can hold more water vapor than cold air. In the summer, you
experience a rise in relative humidity in your basement, because your
basement is cooler than the outside air.
For example (making up some numbers for simple math) say the outside air
is 75 degrees and can hold a maximum of 15 grams of water vapor, and
your basement air is 60 degrees, and can hold a maximum of 10 grams of
water vapor. (Cold air ALWAYS holds less water vapor) Lets say the
outside air at 75 degrees is at 67% relative humidity, i.e. contains
10 grams of water vapor ( 10/15 = .666 = 67%) Now, assuming the
presure remains constant, if you move the parcel of outside air into your
basement, where the temp is 60, you get a relative humidity of 100%
(10/10 = 1.0 = 100%) Therefore, your basement air seems more humid than
the outside air, EVEN THOUGH THE AMOUNT OF WATER VAPOR (10 grams) HASN'T
CHANGED.
So, short of heating your basement in the summer, or installing an air-lock
there ain't a whole lot you can do about it except run the dehumidifier.
BTW, this is exactly the principle on which the dehumidifier is based...
cool the air down far enough and it can't hold the water vapor anymore,
so it condenses out!
Bob
(Armour off!... Ready.... Aim... FIRE!)
|
150.239 | | DICKNS::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Wed May 11 1988 19:32 | 10 |
| See note 581.* in the DELNI::WOODWORKING_AND_TOOLS notesfile.
Consensus seems to be that the only way to really control it
is with a dehumidifier.
However, I'd say that painting definitely is worth doing, for
other reasons. It does keep the dust down, it makes the place
lighter (assuming you use light-colored paint), and it makes
a basement feel less like a dungeon. And it probably does reduce
the moisture...a little.
|
150.240 | Mildew-be-gone | MERLAN::GAGER | | Thu May 12 1988 10:47 | 8 |
| I sealed my basement walls with a white colored "basement
waterproofing paint" and the floors with "Muralo"(sp?) cement
sealer. It definitely got rid of the dust problem and there
is no more mold and mildew to be found. The humidity is still
up around 65% to 75% in the summer if I don't open the basement
windows or run the dehumidifier, but sealing the basement was
definitely a *PLUS*.
,Jeff
|
150.241 | An expensive and practical alternative | SALEM::M_TAYLOR | I call it sin... | Thu May 12 1988 12:06 | 43 |
| The basement isn't what's cold, it's just your walls and floor.
This is the true cause of your (and my) moisture problems. If you
want to see your de-humidifier run less often, and want a more
comfortable basement year-round, then get ready to do some work:
What needs to be done is to first seal your walls with some of that
great concrete-sealing paint, then apply a board-type insulation;
one inch of foam (such as Owens-Corning Energy Shield--name may
be slightly incorrect, but it comes in 4 X 8 sheets and is a tannish
colored foam with a foil surface on both 4 X 8 surfaces) which is
about R 7.?? . Two inches of styrofoam board (blue or pink) would
be around this same R-value. Coat all walls with the insulating
sheets, apply strapping on 16 or 24 inch centers, then cover with
sheetrock and prepare the sheetrock as usual. Stop the insulation
and sheetrock application at some distance above floor-level whatever
you're comfortable with. I'd do mine to about 6 inches above the
floor, mainly so that the source of a wall leak or crack could be
easily found in case that were to occur, or if your basement were
to flood. The insulation could be applied with construction adhesive
and then the strapping would prevent lift-ups. This is about your
easiest way to significantly reduce your moisture content down there,
but you cloud go all the way and frame a floor and insulate that
the same way. Personally, I'd rather see the concrete on the floor
and live with that moisture-condensation source, than risk having
a leak (in the floor) and having to rip-out floor to repair it.
An easier solution would seem to be to just frame a wall conventionally
and then put blanket insulation in it, then cover the walls with
sheetrock or panelling; however, the moisture would still be condensing
against the cool concrete foundation BEHIND your wall, which would
be very difficult to dry out. The board-type of insulation will
actually form a vapor-barrier exactly where it would be needed--on
the face of the concrete.
Hope this helps. By the way, sheetrock is required to cover foam
insulation because the foam emits toxic fumes if it burns. It is
therefore flammable. Do not install any in any living space without adhering
to this guideline.
This method is also a good way stop condensation and heat loss on
a metal cellar bulkhead door. You may skip the sheetrock there,
however.
Mike
|
150.242 | Bottle it for the winter! | HPSTEK::EKOKERNAK | | Thu May 12 1988 19:49 | 5 |
| BTW, most de-humidifiers don't run below 60 degrees air temp. If
you do, they ice up (reference running one year round). I tried
to turn mine on yesterday and it's still icing up!
Elaine
|
150.243 | | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Thu May 12 1988 19:57 | 8 |
| > BTW, most de-humidifiers don't run below 60 degrees air temp. If
> you do, they ice up (reference running one year round). I tried
> to turn mine on yesterday and it's still icing up!
Mine ices up right thru the summer. I have to stick a little heater
1 inch away aimed at the coils. The heater thermostat is set just
right so it's usually off.
|
150.244 | Auto deicer versions. | ULTRA::BUTCHART | | Fri May 13 1988 12:14 | 7 |
| re: icing
Some dehumidifiers are designed to defrost themselves when ice builds
up. They just reverse the refrigeration pump to heat the coils. The
Sears model I bought does this.
/Dave
|
150.245 | Watch where you trap the vapor! | POOL::LANDMAN | VMS - Not just for minis anymore | Fri May 13 1988 13:37 | 17 |
| > ... however, the moisture would still be condensing against the cool
> concrete foundation BEHIND your wall, which would be very difficult to
> dry out. The board-type of insulation will actually form a
> vapor-barrier exactly where it would be needed--on the face of the
> concrete.
While the moisture condenses against the cool wall, it comes from
the warmer basement. The correct location for the vapor barrier
is on the warm side (the room side). It is exactly the same as placing
fiberglass insulation in an outside stud wall, the vapor barrier
goes on the inside to keep the moisture away from the cold surface.
The easy way is to glue 2x2 or 2x4's vertically to the wall, place
foam sheets between them, and run a continuous sheet of construction
plastic over it all, stapling it to the studs. Sheetrock then goes
on top.
|
150.246 | | MYVAX::DIAMOND | Not one of the Beasty Boys | Fri May 13 1988 16:16 | 28 |
|
My tenent just started working for the place in Manchester NH, called
Tuff-N-Dri. They specialize in waterproofing cellers. The stuff
the sell is a process made by Owens Corning. It goes on the outside
of the building, and is guranteed to keep water out. It comes in
three basic ways.
. Just the water sealer. It's sprayed on and when dried its about
a 1/8" thick of very flexable rubber type material. I forget the
exact stuff its made of.
. Next is to put on either 5/8" or 3/8" fiberglass sheets. This
is special waterproof fiberglass. This helps keep the heat in
the celler.
You can get the water sealer by itself or get the water sealer with
one of the fiberglass sheets. If you get it with the 5/8" fiberglass
they gurantee it won't leak for 10 years.
They say that with this process it keeps your celler completely
dry, and you'll never need a dehumidifier. They mainly do new homes,
but they will do an older home. Its not that cheap, but if you're
building a new home, its very affordable for what it gives you.
From what I've seen, it seems real good. When we go to build our
new house in a few years, I think we'll get it.
Mike
|
150.247 | Dehumidifiers expensive to run | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Jul 28 1988 13:48 | 6 |
| Dehumidifiers are expensive to run. According to a brochure put out by
Boston Edison ("What It Costs To Run Your Appliances"), it costs
$45.54 a month to run a dehumidifier in the summer. The numbers
they give are 575 watts, 414 kWh/month, .11/kWh. The only "appliance"
that costs more is a swimming pool pump ($47.52/month). Even central
air (36K BTU) costs less than a dehumidifier ($44.55/month).
|
150.248 | $45 seems high, what about duty cycle | PALMER::PALMER | half a bubble off plumb | Thu Jul 28 1988 15:17 | 10 |
| I just got my electrical bill for the past 30 days. During
that the dehumidifier was on all the time and the air conditioner
was run in my bedroom about 20 nights. I saw a $13 increase from
the previous month, witch was without the dehumidifier or the AC.
Perhaps the Edison report assumes that the dehumidifier is active
all the time, instead of a duty cycle of off and on. As with
each situation cost will vary wildly with room size and insulation,
but it didn't cost me anywhere near $45 to run my dehumidifier for
a month.
=Ralph=
|
150.249 | was your bill "actual use"? | PSTJTT::TABER | The project killer | Thu Jul 28 1988 17:48 | 12 |
| > I just got my electrical bill for the past 30 days. During
> that the dehumidifier was on all the time and the air conditioner
> was run in my bedroom about 20 nights. I saw a $13 increase from
> the previous month, witch was without the dehumidifier or the AC.
Did you get an actual bill or an estimated bill? In my area, at least,
the power company only reads the meter every other month, and the month
between they guess at your use. Last year I ran a dehumidifier in the
basement and the increase was right in line with the estimate. (I'm not
sure of the pennies, but the dollars were right on the mark...)
>>>==>PStJTT
|
150.250 | $45 can't be real | HPSTEK::EKOKERNAK | | Thu Jul 28 1988 18:39 | 6 |
| My whole bill for last month (actual) was $45, and I run two
dehumidifiers constantly when the temperature is over 60 F.
My basement is dry and cool, and I wouldn't have it any other way.
Elaine
|
150.251 | | MTWAIN::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Thu Jul 28 1988 18:43 | 11 |
| Best guess for me is about $12/month to run my basement dehumidifier.
Maybe a little less. They read the meter every month. Now, if
you have a basement that grows fungus farms and mildew cultures
in 3 hours it would probably cost you more than that. But you've
got to consider how much the dehumidifier is actually going to
be running. I've never bothered to time it, but mine may run
25% of the time. 25% of $45 is...about $12.
Be sure you've got the humidity level sensor on the dehumidifier
set to something sane. I set mine so on a nice dry breezy, sunny
day in the spring when I can open the basement windows, the dehumidifier
just barely does not come on.
|
150.252 | need a dehumidifier? | BINKLY::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Thu Jul 28 1988 21:02 | 7 |
| SIlly question - we have central Air - but its in the attic, and
little or none filters down to the basement, especially since the
basement door is usually closed (I have been thinking of putting a
vent in the door, but my wife has a aesthetic problem with this). The
basement is somewhat stuffy, but there's no visible mold growing - I
can't think of any reason to run a dehumidifier - but, on the other
hand???? thanx/j
|
150.253 | | MTWAIN::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Fri Jul 29 1988 13:37 | 9 |
| Do you need one? Not unless you have a specific reason. A lot
of us have them because we have our shops in the basement, and
dampness + machine tool surfaces = rust, which is not a good thing.
Far better to spend 10 or 15 bucks a month in the summer to run
a dehumidifier than to go down someday and discover that the
rip fence on the $1000 Unisaw is rusted in place. If you use
your basement for living space or working space, I think you'd
find it more pleasant if you got a dehumidifier. If your basement
is just the place where the fusebox-protecting spiders live, forget it.
|
150.254 | | EDUC8::PHILBROOK | Chico's Daddy | Mon Aug 01 1988 18:20 | 24 |
| We purchased a dehumidifer at the end of June. It ran continuously
throughout July (we have a very musty, mildewy problem down there
so we decided to let it go 100%.) Our electric bill for June was
$45 (includes electric water heater) and that was mainly for the
5000 BTU air conditioner.
Our July bill just came. It's $90! $23 for water, $60 for electric,
the balance is miscellaneous fees that our wonderful PSNH tacks
on every month.
The difference has to be mainly the dehumidifier. We use the a/c
in the bedroom from 6pm to 6am and did so for the better part of
June. The a/c ran only slightly more often in July than in June.
I'm setting the dehumidifier back to 4 or 5 when I get home tonight!
By the way, our dehumidifier throws off hot air -- is that normal?
It keeps the cellar nice and dry but it's far from cool down there.
Also, any ideas for setting up a draining system? The water won't
pump up and out of a window or the bulkhead, naturally. It's getting
to be a real pain to empty the pan twice a day.
Thanks,
Mike
|
150.255 | "Little Giant" condensate pumps | CHART::CBUSKY | | Mon Aug 01 1988 19:57 | 40 |
150.256 | Threaded spout | CNTROL::KING | | Mon Aug 01 1988 20:16 | 3 |
| Try getting a dehumidifier with a threaded spout on it and then
just hook up a garden hose to it and run the hose to where you empty
it anyhow. That's what I've got.
|
150.257 | Water only runs DOWN HILL! | CHART::CBUSKY | | Mon Aug 01 1988 21:05 | 9 |
| > Try getting a dehumidifier with a threaded spout on it and then
> just hook up a garden hose to it and run the hose to where you empty
> it anyhow. That's what I've got.
Most dehumidifiers have the threaded spout BUT, that only works if you
have someplace to run the hose to that's LOWER than the dehumidifier! I
also believe that the dehumidifier is most efficient at ground level,
so raising it up high enough to drain some place would not be a
reasonable solution, for me anyways.
|
150.258 | normal to give off heat | FREDW::MATTHES | | Tue Aug 02 1988 12:14 | 10 |
| re .- a few ...gives off heat... Is that normal??
How do you dehumidify air ??
You lower the temperature of the air so it can't hold as much water
vapor. The water vapor condenses onto a collector that drips into
a pan. How do you lower the temperature of the air?? You remove
heat from it.
What do you do with the heat that you removed from the air ??
|
150.259 | Hang It Over the Drain Pipe! | DSTR08::SMICK | Van C. Smick | Tue Aug 02 1988 12:18 | 18 |
| RE: .19 & .20
If you have a washing machine in the basement, you might be able to install
your dehumidifier above the drain pipe and run a hose from the dehumidifier
to the pipe. You may have to built a wooden platform, but from then on you
won't have to empty the bucket, or pay for an electrical pump.
I installed mine in this manner and never have to worry about it --
although it is a minor pain to hop up on the washer if I want to adjust
the settings!
RE: .22
> I believe that the dehumidifier is most efficient at ground level,
Why do you believe that? Warm air can hold more moisture than cool air
and the warmer air will rise. Why is a dehumidifier more efficient with
cooler air?
|
150.260 | | CURIE::BBARRY | | Tue Aug 02 1988 17:37 | 14 |
| >> I believe that the dehumidifier is most efficient at ground level,
>Why do you believe that? Warm air can hold more moisture than cool air
>and the warmer air will rise. Why is a dehumidifier more efficient with
>cooler air?
I think you answered your own question. To dehumidify air you remove the
heat from it until it saturates. Since the air at the bottom of the room
is cooler, less heat has to be removed and the dehumidifier should run
more efficiently. Remember that _relative_ humidity is the amount of moisteure
relative to the airs capacity to hold moisture, not the total amount of
moisture in the air(i.e. same water at higher temp=lower relative humidity.)
Brian
|
150.261 | huh? | EDUC8::PHILBROOK | Chico's Daddy | Tue Aug 02 1988 20:04 | 14 |
| >How do you dehumidify air ??
>You lower the temperature of the air so it can't hold as much water
>vapor. The water vapor condenses onto a collector that drips into
>a pan. How do you lower the temperature of the air?? You remove
>heat from it.
>What do you do with the heat that you removed from the air ??
I'm confused by your reply. If the humidifier is throwing heat into
the air doesn't it defeat the purpose of removing heat from the
air??
Mike
|
150.262 | | BEING::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Tue Aug 02 1988 20:31 | 15 |
| > I'm confused by your reply. If the humidifier is throwing heat into
> the air doesn't it defeat the purpose of removing heat from the
> air??
Being unable to remove heat from the air completely, it throws heat into some
air in order to remove heat from some other air. Basically, it's just a bunch
of refridgerated coils and a fan. It cools down the coils, and the fan draws
air over them. Water condenses on the coils, and drips into the pan. But the
refridgeration unit that cools the coils has to dump the heat somewhere, and it
just blows it out the side somewhere.
After all, you didn't really want the dehumidifier to make your basement
colder, did you?
Paul
|
150.263 | | QUARK::LIONEL | May you live in interesting times | Wed Aug 03 1988 01:52 | 4 |
| Actually, a dehumidifier just blows the dried air back over the
condensor coils (which are hot) to re-warm the air.
Steve
|
150.264 | reminds of the one ... | FREDW::MATTHES | | Wed Aug 03 1988 11:36 | 19 |
| And since we're using energy to do work there's always more heat
then there was before.
Reminds me of a story where we had a problem with a couple of 11/34
systems in a fairly small room. They'd die about mid-morning on
days like this - just too damn hot. We'd have to use one of the
systems but not the other. This led to some idle time.
We managed to get a req through for an A/C unit. One of the
maintenance crew went down to Lechmere and purchased a decent sized
house room air conditioner - nothing industrial size here. Yay!!
We could get some work done. Well, the damn machines died again.
Upon investigating the situation, we discovered a room air conditioner
sitting in the middle of the room flailing away at the air trying
to cool it down. If I remember correctly the guy that set it up
at least had a bucket under the drain.
We finally managed to educate him that the idea was to REMOVE heat
from the room; not to add to it.
|
150.265 | very similiar things | REGENT::GETTYS | Bob Gettys N1BRM 223-6897 | Wed Aug 03 1988 20:42 | 21 |
| I find it kinda funny that no one has explained that an
air conditioner and a dehumidifier are essentially the same
thing. Both have a freon cooling system to cool down one set of
coils and expel the excess heat from another set. Both have a
fan (or fans) to blow air across these sets of coils. The major
difference is that the AC is also designed to move that heat
from inside a room to outside that room. The dehumidifier
doesn't do that.
Both will take humidity from the air. The dehumidifier
*may* be more efficient than the AC at doing that only because
you tend run the dehumidifier more than the AC so you extract
more water vapor. You also don't tend to shut the thing off
because it's getting to cool (with it shut off, it doesn't
dehumidify). The dehumidifier will also warm the air some as it
runs thus making the place seem less humid (some of the heat
comes from the energy used to run the unit - all those watts get
mostly converted into heat -- the rest from the phase
transition of water vapor to liguid).
/s/ Bob
|
150.266 | What about EER ? | VIDEO::NOTT | | Thu Aug 04 1988 17:29 | 16 |
| Has anyone ever seen an energy rating on a dehumidifier? I can't
recall ever having seen one. That being the case, I suspect that
dehumidifiers are generally "less efficient" than an equivalent
A/C unit. However, since the purpose of each is different how would
one go about making a reasonable comparison? I'm going on the idea
that A/C units have been significantly improved in recent years
as far as the efficiency (like BTU's per kWatt) ratings - mostly
due to pressure from consumers and Utilities. I don't believe the
same emphasis has been placed on dehum's.
If I had a choice, I'd use an A/C to dehumidify. However, for a
moist basement application, it seems that the dehumidifier does
a better job.
Bill
|
150.267 | Umm..Can I ask a question here.... | SMURF::WALLACE | Life's a beach, then you dive! | Thu Aug 04 1988 17:54 | 5 |
|
Dehumidifiers. Why?
Other than for a finished room in the basement, why would you
need/want one down there?
|
150.268 | pint/hour/amp | CURIE::BBARRY | | Thu Aug 04 1988 17:57 | 8 |
| -< What about EER ? >-
I am not sure if they have an EER or not, but you could probably
generate your own. Take the capacity per hour and divide by the
maximum amperage. You would then end up with some number like
.2 pint/hour/amp.
Brian
|
150.269 | | MTWAIN::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Thu Aug 04 1988 19:42 | 5 |
| re: .32
Yes, dehumidifiers have EER ratings. At least the ones made by
Friedrich (sp?) do. As I recall,they're roughly comparable to
their air conditioners (typically 9 to 10, I think).
|
150.270 | maybe partially finished or used | FREDW::MATTHES | | Thu Aug 04 1988 20:13 | 9 |
| re . 32
workshops - tools that rust, wood that overexpands, etc.
On the other side of the cellar I have a desk with some books that
have gotten musty.
If I had the money and time to finsh it, the dehumidifier would
not have to work as hard.
|
150.271 | Buyer's Guide | CIMNET::MIKELIS | Just browsing through time... | Thu Aug 04 1988 20:30 | 14 |
150.272 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Aug 05 1988 13:49 | 6 |
150.273 | guess so | CIMNET::MIKELIS | Just browsing through time... | Fri Aug 05 1988 15:50 | 3 |
| Don't know, the article didn't say - but i assume it is.
-jim-
|
150.274 | drainage hole | NAC::S_JACOBS | Live Free and Prosper | Mon Aug 08 1988 18:07 | 12 |
| When I bought my house there was a 6" diameter hole in the floor
next to the furnace (FHW), under the emergency release valve. I
just ran the hose from the dehumidifier into the hole. I would
only recommend adding a hole if you have a walk-out basement, or
if you have a very low water table.
During the massive flooding last year, we had water coming up through
the hole and oozing out over the floor. Solved it by running a
siphon out the sliders and down the hill in back.
The hole makes for a convenient dehumidifier drain, and lets me
leave the unit on the floor!
|
150.275 | no-drip backflow valves??? | CORNIS::BELKIN | Babylon by DECNET | Tue Aug 09 1988 13:32 | 19 |
|
Well, I just got a dehumidifier, and the $70 Little Giant
condensate pump to pump the water up out of the pan and
into my washer drain.
since the outlet of the hose ( 3/8 ID plasic tube, about 30' long)
is higher than the dehumidifer pan (this can't be changed unless
I raise the dehumifier, etc etc :-) I found that I need to
use a backflow valve. Or else a cup or so of water in the tube
runs back into the pan, and turns the pump back on. that is
the pump cycles on and off even if the dehumifier weren't running..
So I got a "regular" vertical type brass backflow valve, but it
does not work so well. Inside it has a brass flap that seats
on brass when it closes - so it drips a bit. Anyone know where
I can get a GOOD small-sized backflow valve? I called an
aquarium store, nada...
Josh
|
150.276 | sounds like the pump is too eager | PSTJTT::TABER | The project killer | Tue Aug 09 1988 15:15 | 13 |
| It's very difficult to get a check valve that does not allow some water
to trickle back, especially in a case like yours. Can you adjust the
setting on your pump to make it insensitive to the cup or so of water
that flows back from the tube? Failing that, can you re-route the tube
so that you get less back flow?
If your pump can't be adjusted, maybe you could install it higher in the
pan, or put a length of hose or an elbow between the pan and the pump to
raise the pump enough that it will not sense a small amount of water.
You wouldn't want the pump cycling for every cupful of water anyway --
it's much better to have it wait until you have a quart or a half gallon
before it kicks in.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
150.277 | hydraulic engineering, anyone? | FINIAL::BELKIN | Babylon by DECNET | Tue Aug 09 1988 19:53 | 28 |
| re < Note 2280.41 by PSTJTT::TABER "The project killer" >
thanks for the suggestions, but most of them really won't work:
>to trickle back, especially in a case like yours. Can you adjust the
>setting on your pump to make it insensitive to the cup or so of water
It already has a setup that allows hysteresus (sp!!) in the watrer level,
about 1/2 inch. Has a little float that moves a vertical wire with two
"C" clips up and down against a mercury switch.
>Failing that, can you re-route the tube so that you get less back flow?
Not really. No matter what, unless the outlet is lower than the inlet
(the pump), it will siphon back.
>If your pump can't be adjusted, maybe you could install it higher in the
>pan,
It is designed to sit in the pan and let the level rise to about 1 1/2",
then pump it down to about 3/4 ".
>You wouldn't want the pump cycling for every cupful of water anyway --
Yeah, but the valve only tricks a drop every second or so - not a perfect
seal, but not a torrent. The dehumififier itself seems to dribble more
water per second than the leaky valve - but I still would like to find a
good valve, or maybe take apart this one an put in some rubber seals
somehow. Think its time to "borrow" my Dad's old "they don't make them
like THIS anymore" UNIMAT lathe that I used to play with as a kid... :-)
Josh
|
150.141 | Hydraulic cement, sealers? | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Aug 10 1988 15:29 | 16 |
| I picked _this_ note more or less randomly of the dozen or so on
wet basements.
Our basement is _very_ humid. There is visible moisture around some small
cracks in the floor, and around the cemented-over line running from
the oil tank to the burner. The plastered fieldstone foundation also
seems damp. I haven't tried the foil/plastic wrap trick to determine
if the problem is seepage or condensation, but I plan to. We have leaky
gutters (which are going to be replaced soon) and the grading around
the foundation is so-so.
Before investing in a dehumidifier, I'd like to try to solve the problem
at its source. Should I open up the cracks with a chisel and put down
hydraulic cement? We're planning to convert from oil to gas heat,
so I can do the same with the oil line. Should I use some kind of sealer
on the floor? Brand recommendations would be welcome.
|
150.297 | Keep Laundry Area Dry in Basement | CSCMA::M_ELDRIDGE | | Tue Aug 30 1988 16:21 | 22 |
| Must begin with a disclaimer: I have looked long and hard for a
similar topic and didn't come up with anything that quite fit.
I would be happy to have the moderator move this where it might
properly belong.
The issue:
Keeping a laundry room safe and dry.
Every house I've lived in has had the washer/dryer in a dry living
area, or had them up on wooden platforms in the basement. I guess
the basements I've used have never been quite safe from the threat
of water.
My current basement is not safe from such a threat. It's dry 99%
of the time, but in three years, it's twice flooded 1 inch deep.
Not much water, but can do much damage. I'd like to do something
nicer than put the washer/dryer up on blocks of wood, or on pallets.
Possibilities: Build an indoor deck of treated wood in the basement.
Build the laundry room on this. Or, perhaps a raised level of poured
cement. Or, Just lay down linoleum and hope for the best?
|
150.298 | VOTE FOR A CONCRETE PAD | CHOVAX::GILSON | | Tue Aug 30 1988 17:55 | 5 |
| We had good success with a 4" thick concrete pad which extended about
several feet in front of the washer and dryer. Previous owners in
the house had made a wood deck that covered a large portion of the
basement which we tore out because over time it developed mildew and rot
from not drying thoroughly.
|
150.299 | decks are for barbecuing | HEYYOU::ELKIND | Steve Elkind | Tue Aug 30 1988 20:11 | 3 |
| Friends of ours also had problems with a rotting deck in their basement (it
stank, too!). The only deck solution I can think of I would stay away from -
pressure-treated wood is not a good idea on the interior of a house.
|
150.300 | Basements are meant to be dry. | POOL::LANDMAN | VMS - Not just for minis anymore | Wed Aug 31 1988 19:05 | 11 |
| > I guess the basements I've used have never been quite safe from the
> threat of water.
> My current basement is not safe from such a threat. It's dry 99% of
> the time, but in three years, it's twice flooded 1 inch deep. Not much
> water, but can do much damage. I'd like to do something nicer than put
> the washer/dryer up on blocks of wood, or on pallets.
Is there any fundamental reason why you can't fix the problem so
that you have a dry basement? What causes it to flood so badly every
year?
|
150.301 | Fond childhood memories of a lake in the basement | CSCMA::M_ELDRIDGE | | Tue Sep 06 1988 14:04 | 32 |
|
Yes, sigh, basements are meant to be dry. I think I've forgotten
that over the years. You start treating the symptoms, and not the
problem. The house I grew up in had a stone foundation, always
leaked somewhere, and had trenches built into the floor to funnel
the water to the sump pump. Never occurred to us to try and make
it water tight.
I think I have taken care of my major problems. I had a stack (or
whatever you call that pipe that vents the toilet fumes out the
roof) that had cracks in its seal against the roof. Heavy rains
were running along that pipe right down into the basement. I sealed
it. The bulkhead was also leaking. I sealed it. The float on
the sump pump was set too high. I lowered it.
In spite of these preventative actions, I don't feel safe, and probobly
never will, against the possibility of flooding.
One other thing that may cause flooding. The hole that my sump
pump is in, has a dirt bottom. With heavy rains, the water level
rises, coming in through the dirt. The sump pump pumps it back
out. Once the sump pump choked on a stick, and the basement flooded.
Once a blackout stopped the pump from working, and the basement
flooded. The well water comes in through a pipe in the hole, can
it be sealed over as well? I've also thought of building a retaining
wall, that if the water kept rising, it would be kept within the
retaining wall.
Thanks to everyone for their interest and help.
|
150.302 | Webbed feet? | HPSTEK::EKOKERNAK | | Tue Sep 06 1988 20:04 | 5 |
| Sounds like you need one of those flood alarms
Elaine
:-)
|
150.303 | I remember.. | FDCV30::CALCAGNI | A.F.F.A. | Wed Sep 07 1988 14:55 | 19 |
|
Can you dig down through the dirt under/around that pump?
When I worked in Construction, many moons ago, we use to dig a
hole in the floor approx 3 to 4 feet deep, take a old section of
concrete , sewer pipe which was about 3" in diamenter and some crushed
tailings, stone.
The pipe you can pick up from a cement piep yard for next to nothing,
just get some of the broken pieces. This we used to line the hole.
Put the tailings, crushed stone 1" 1/2, into the hole and set in
the pump. Never had a problem with the pumps filling up with dirt.
Also dug a trench around the parementer of the cellar just below
water level and used the crushed stone here too. this'll keep you
dry.
|
150.199 | Plastic baseboard solution? | TLE::PEARL | Larry Pearl (TLE::PEARL) DTN: 381-2254 | Mon Oct 10 1988 15:48 | 17 |
| I'm about to start on a waterproofing project. B-dry has given me an
estimate of $5k for running pipe and stone into a sump with a two
pump system.
I have some experience with this type of system from a previous house
(it works!) but wanted to try to avoid the expense and try some alternatives
this time.
Instead of running pipe I've seen in ad in Custom Builder for a product
that is basically a plastic baseboard which is epoxied to the floor.
The water coming in the floor/wall joint is then channeled to the
sump. Does anyone have experience with this type of system or know where
the material can be obtained in Southern NH or Northeastern Mass?
Also, where can I obtain plasic sump liners? I made a liner in the other
house out of a 12x12 chimney tile. It worked fine except that drilling
drain holes, even with a masonry bit, was very slow.
|
150.200 | rply > .20 | HPSCAD::STRAVINSKI | | Mon Oct 10 1988 17:12 | 5 |
| Saw what I think you are looking for in Somerville Lumber in Westboro,
about 3/4 down the store on right side. The price of the adhesive,
if I remember well was something like $60 gallon. Don't know how
far a gallon does.
|
150.25 | Basement wall crack... | HOFNER::MELENDEZ | Duck Flailer's bass... | Mon Dec 05 1988 16:07 | 9 |
| I am finishing my basement. About 10 years ago, I had one of those
drain system (dig all around the house, put pipe into pump) installed
I have not had any water problems since. It does work, and it cost
big $$$ even back then.
I am now putting up walls and there is a crack in the foundation
wall which lets water into the house. I would like to seal this crack
before I put the finish wall. What would be the best way to do it?
|
150.26 | Hydralic Cement | NWACES::LANOUE | Who said it's going to be easy? | Mon Dec 05 1988 16:34 | 5 |
| Clean up the crack with a chisel and patch it with hydralic cement.
Smooth with a putty knife and you should have no further leaking.
Don
|
150.27 | Cement is not forever! | HIHOSS::HOSSFELD | | Tue Dec 06 1988 11:50 | 18 |
|
< Clean up the crack with a chisel and patch it with hydralic cement.
< Smooth with a putty knife and you should have no further leaking.
The hydralic cement is anly a temp fix because of frost. In the
winter the foundation will be affected by frost and ground
movement. When this happens and the foundation is pushed by it
the cement, which is strong but brittle, will crack as did the
orginal foundation.
The solution is to remove the water from the outside of the
foundation. i.e. gutters, ground drain, etc.
I have heard many different solutions to cracks and have been
working on one for 8 years. If any one comes up with a solution
that works that doesn't cost a fortune I could use it.
|
150.28 | Epoxy sealer | BAGELS::MONDOU | | Tue Dec 06 1988 17:26 | 11 |
| I also tried the hydraulic cement fix with poor results.
There is an epoxy-type product that is widely used by boaters
for fixing leaks. One brand is "Glu Vit". It is produced
in several colors and the manufacturer claims it can be painted.
It's available in most marine supply stores.
I have used it to fix several troublesome leaks around the bottom
of my bulkhead. No problems after two years.
Send me mail if you want more info.
|
150.29 | silicone caulk | NAC::S_JACOBS | Live Free and Prosper | Tue Dec 06 1988 18:50 | 9 |
| I have used silcone caulk, and it works great. We have a top-to-bottom
crack in one wall of our basement which used to leak all the time.
Now it NEVER leaks. During the 'great flood' of 1987, the ground
was so wet that water came _up_ through cracks in the floor (and
we have a walk-out basement), but that wall crack never leaked.
They even sell the silicone in a grey shade to match concrete (sort
of).
Steve
|
150.30 | Where? | HIHOSS::HOSSFELD | | Wed Dec 07 1988 11:18 | 4 |
| <
Did the two sealers get applied to the inside or outside.
|
150.31 | Applied mine inside | BAGELS::MONDOU | | Wed Dec 07 1988 12:34 | 10 |
| I applied the Glu Vit inside my cellar. I had several small
cracks around the area where the lower portion of the bulkhead
stairs joined the foundation. Applying sealer from the exterior
in this case would have involved some serious excavation.
I had heard that other epoxy-type sealers were available for
patching concrete but could not locate any. The Glu Vit package
states it seals concrete and many other materials. It's not
very "attractive" but works well.
|
150.32 | Inside | NAC::S_JACOBS | Live Free and Prosper | Wed Dec 07 1988 15:17 | 3 |
| The silicone went on the inside
S
|
150.33 | HELP WATER | MKFSA::ROSE | | Wed Apr 05 1989 15:25 | 25 |
|
I also have water problems. My builder screwed me with improper
drianage. (long story on builder problems). What I need to know
is.
1. I have to cut up the basement floor, how many cuts, and where?
2. If I have to cut around the parimmiter of the floor, does that
mean right next to the footing or 6" away.
3. Should I use a drain pipe, Or if I have the capabilites to let
gravity take the water off into the woods, should I do so. IE:
Have a drain pipe from the spot in my basement, under the footing
and off to the woods. Should I do this, or go with the sure thing,
the dreaded sump pump.
4. The vapor barrier that goes on after the pipes are set in, what
is the best type?
5. How many inches of cement do I have poured?
The outside of the house is full of ledger and backfilled with
boulders, so that is out of the question. I have the surface
water rerouted around the house, and away.
I would really appreciate your help, I am having a floor cutter
come in on the week of the 17th.
Thanks Brian
|
150.34 | My cure | GIAMEM::LAMPROS | Bill Lampros | Wed Apr 05 1989 15:59 | 31 |
| Re; .33
When I moved into my house 6 years ago I found out I had
a water problem. Most suggestions included:
* Sump pump
* Digging basement perimeter out and run drain pipe
thru foundation and away from house.
What I did was:
1. Cut a 18"X18" hole in the concrete floor. Concrete
was about 4" thick.
2. Dig a hole about 2 feet deep.
3. Cut a 4" hole in foundation approx 1 foot below cellar
floor.
4. Dig trench outside and lay 4" pipe from hole in foundation
to lower section of yard. In my case it was about 30'
to the woods.
5. Fill back trench.
6. Put screen mesh over pipe hole protruding into cellar.
7. Fill hole with crushed stone.
8. Cement over cellar floor again.
Might work for you. Cost is pretty cheap. By the way, I had water
comming in from the opposite end of the cellar before I put the pipe
in and haven't gotten a drop in the cellar since I installed the pipe
5 years ago. For me there was no need to dig around the inside
parimeter of the basement. You should see the volume of water comming
out of the pipe in the spring. You might want to try this before
digging a trench around your whole cellar.
Bill
|
150.35 | Use Gravity! | CHART::CBUSKY | | Wed Apr 05 1989 16:08 | 9 |
| > Have a drain pipe from the spot in my basement, under the footing
> and off to the woods. Should I do this, or go with the sure thing,
> the dreaded sump pump.
The SURE THING is to design it so that GRAVITY drains the water off
into the woods or where ever. Pumps can fail or the power can go off
just when you need it the most, DURING A STORM.
Charly
|
150.36 | | MYVAX::DIAMOND | No brag, Just fact. | Thu Apr 06 1989 18:36 | 7 |
|
Another cheapo suggestion which I've seen work. Dig up around the
house about a foot deep and lay down this corigated flex pipe. Lead
this pipe off someplace to lower ground. This has a good chance
of working, depending upon where the water is comming from.
Mike
|
150.37 | High water tables? | VINO::GRANSEWICZ | Which way to Tahiti? | Fri Apr 07 1989 12:41 | 7 |
|
RE: .36
A foot deep??? How much water could there be a foot deep? Perimeter
drains are usually run at the footing of the foundation. If you
have a lot of water a foot deep you'd be better off putting up gutters.
|
150.38 | | MYVAX::DIAMOND | No brag, Just fact. | Fri Apr 07 1989 16:29 | 7 |
|
Going a foot deep isn't to drain off the water table. All it is
good for is runoff to keep it away from the house. It all depends
upon the situation as to wether it will work or not. I know of one
house it worked great on. Most houses it probably won't work on.
Mike
|
150.201 | i have the same problem, what should I do? | CADSE::ONG | | Wed Apr 19 1989 16:37 | 40 |
| hi
I purchased my house in 1987 September. When I bought it, the water
was in the basement. I asked the builder and he said the water came in
from the bulkhead door being opened during the construction. They dried
it out with a mop before we closed. Later on, we got the water coming
in from the base of the bulkhead steps. The dirt caved in next the
bulkhead door outside the house. So I dumped 4 or 5 wheeled loads of
dirt. When the next rain came, we still got water from the base of
the bulkhead, but a lot less than the first time. Then I called the
builder, and he came in and looked. He said the bulkhead door could be
defective. He asked me to call the contractor who delivered the
bulkhead. They came and looked and put some caulking (seal) around the
joints of the bulkhead, but they pointed the finger back to the builder.
So we called the builder and he came back at the next rain last year,
and used hydraulic cement.
After the cement, it gets a lot better, but still getting water
when there is a soaking rain. Then he said, I should dig a trench
around the bulkhead to divert the surface water off the basement wall.
I didn't do it last year.
Now last week, the water came in again from last week's soaking
rain (estimated 1.5"). This time, I noticed that the water comes in
from the floor joint at the base of the wall, next to the bulkhead
door. I also noticed that the rest of the floor joint mostly is wet
(but not leaking).
I called the builder, this time I didn't received any response from
him yet.
From reading all of your notes, it started to scare me the type of
problems everybody is running into, but with high cost, and legal
process.
Could anyone of you help me and tell me what I should do?
thanks
hydraulic cement and calk
|
150.202 | Deja vu!! | TOLKIN::GUERRA | Who am I? The devil's advocate? | Wed Apr 19 1989 18:27 | 16 |
| I had to look at the heading on your note to make sure I didn't
write the note in my sleep or something. I had exactly the same
problem and went through the same runaround with my builders and
his sub-contractors. I went as far as retaining an attorney ($500)
to deal with the builder. He did a few things when he saw I meant
business, but in another year the problem was back. I finally gave
up and decided to chip away the hydraulic cement he and his son
put down, clean up the area and put to seal it again. The groove
must be shaped like an inverted "v" and I know they didn't do it
that way. This will make the cement seal tighter against the crack
when the water pressure builds up underneath. If I had done that from
the beginning, I could have saved $500 and a lot of aggravation with
a builder that, to make things worse, is a neighbor. I wish you luck.
There's nothing that bothers me more about all the things that the
builder did or failed to do than finding a puddle next to my bulkhead
steps after every rain storm.
|
150.203 | Some ideas | NSSG::FEINSMITH | I'm the NRA | Thu Apr 20 1989 14:55 | 19 |
| How is the land graded around the house? Are there gutters on the
house? Does water collect around the bulkhead? When you fill cracks,
seams, etc, you're fighting hydrostatic pressure from the outside,
which may work, but it might be easier (or at least more effective in
the long run) to remove the problem rather than treat the symptom.
The grade should run away from the house so the water doesn't collect
around the foundation. Though there has been a lot of debate
(especially in cold climates) about gutters, I would give them a yes
vote. I just had them installed on my new house and the yard is not a
mud pool after a rain storm (I have the main downspout piped 50' away
from the house). also my garage doors don't get soaked so hopefully the
panels will last.
My first house (in 1978) has basement water problems until the grading
was corrected and no problems after that. All this assumes that the
problem is not caused by a high water table!
Eric
|
150.204 | down slope grade, no gutter... | CADSE::ONG | | Wed Apr 26 1989 15:57 | 23 |
|
When standing in my backyard and looking at the back of my house
this is what it looks like....The slope of the land is in a downward
slope. Starting at the left back corner of my house and procede
walking along the back of my house to the back right corner, I would
be going up hill. The length of my rear foundation wall is 40 feet.
The distance from the top of the foundation to the ground on the
right side is approximatly 18 inches, and on the left side is
approximatly 4 feet. This should give you an idea for land grade.
The bulkhead is placed on the left side of rear foundation wall
approxiamtly 10 feet from the corner. The bulkhead has 4 steps.
There are no gutters or crushed stone around the perimeter
of the house at grass level. No water collects around the bulkhead.
When it rains, it appears the rain water just drains down along
the foundation and running down the slope side of the house.
sorry for replying late....
thanks advance for your response
|
150.205 | Regrading sounds necessary | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Thu Apr 27 1989 12:34 | 23 |
| I am many others have found that a standard contractor method is to
do the minimal amount at the last moment, and hope that you'll finally
get so tired out that you give up and fix it yourself. Unfortunately,
I and many others have found that we couldn't beat the method. I
eventually had my yard regraded to raise the ground level by my house,
which also required raising my bulkhead. Then my problems were over.
In addition to a swampy yard and water coming through the bulkhead
(after regrading but before raising the bulkhead), I also had water
coming in a crack in the foundation. The builder kept coming out and
rubbing cement into the crack without widening it -- the inverted V
may or may not be necessary, but rubbing cement into a narrow crack is
guaranteed not to work. We eventually got him to try sealing it on the
outside, but nothing worked until we regraded to keep the water flowing
away from the house.
So I'd advise you to contact a landscaper about regrading so that the
ground level goes down as you move away from the house. Pay for it
yourself and then decide whether you have the energy to collect it
from the builder. At the least, you can file the complaint with the BBB.
Luck,
Larry
|
150.206 | what do yu think with these remedies? | CADSE::ONG | | Thu Apr 27 1989 18:08 | 26 |
|
it sounds like the water is coming from the surface in most cases of
the notes I read.
how can we find out whether the water is coming from the surface or
from the underground water table?
one thing I noticed in my case that the basement leaks when there is
a 2 or 3 days of soaking heavy rain, but stops leaking the next day
after the rain stops. Can we conclude that the leak is from the surface
water, but NOT from the underground water table?
If the water is from the surface, then here is what I am planning to do
for this summer project:
1. install gutters
2. seal the foundation with hydraulic cement (how do you dig an
inverted V in the crack? is there a tool I can rent?)
3. From outside, dig a sloping trench next to the bulkhead
(probably 10 to 15 feet long only), lay down a perforated PVC pipe
with gravel/crushed stones. The purpose is to divert the surface
water away from the foundation near the bulkhead.
what do you think? is that worth doing it?
thanks
|
150.207 | My suggestion | VINO::GRANSEWICZ | Which way to Tahiti? | Fri Apr 28 1989 20:31 | 3 |
|
I'd suggest doing them 1 at a time, and then determine the impact.
I suspect the gutters will solve the problem.
|
150.39 | B-dry system for waterproofing | DASXPS::TERRIO | | Wed May 03 1989 11:08 | 7 |
|
Has anybody ever heard of a B-dry system for waterproofing a
cellar? If you have or know someone who has please let me know how
it has worked out.
Rick
|
150.40 | good experience with B-dry system | DSTEG::HUGHES | | Wed May 10 1989 17:32 | 25 |
| I had B-Dry install their water proofing system in my basement.
It's very expensive, it cost me four thousand dollars. They break
up and dig out the concrete floor, a foot wide, all along the inside
wall of your basement. They lay a drainage pipe in hole, surround it
with pea stones and recement on top. The pipe is arranged to have
a high point and a low point. At the low point they install a hugh
sump pump. I had cracks in the basement walls which they filled
and faced with some plastic looking material. Also all around
the edge of of the floor, against the wall, a couple of inches of
the plastic looking material sticks up. The idea is if water drips
down the walls it is suppose to go behind and into the drainage
system.
One nice feature is that they put a drainage hole for a dehumidifier.
So now the dehumidifier drains right into the waterproofing system.
I was very pleased with their work, they cleaned up after themselves.
It's a real messy job. We had them do it before we moved into the
house. The people who did my basement were out of Lexington MA.
The drainage system has a lifetime guarantee and is transfereable.
The sump pump is not part of the lifetime guarantee.
Linda
|
150.278 | Air conditioner vs. humidifier | TOKLAS::FELDMAN | PDS, our next success | Mon May 22 1989 19:05 | 13 |
| Is it at all reasonable to use an air conditioner in a basement window
instead of a dehumidifier, perhaps wired to a humidistat? Some of the
earlier notes suggest that the dehumidifier would be more efficient,
but I wonder how that balances against the increased heat in the house.
My primary motivation for wanting to do this is to solve the water
disposal problem, though it may also solve the defrosting problem. An
air conditioner can just drip outside. I'd either have to empty the
dehumidifier by hand, or else drill yet another hole in the siding or
basement door and run a hose outside, while worrying about pests
getting inside.
Gary
|
150.279 | | NSSG::FEINSMITH | I'm the NRA | Mon May 22 1989 19:38 | 12 |
| Considering that a basement is usually cooler than the house, it seems
that the air conditioner would make it colder yet, and lowering the
air's moisture holding capacity more.
If you have a drain pipe in the basement going under the slab, you
might be able to install another "sink trap" to dump the dehumidifier
into. Also, if you have an open sump, the water could be dumped down
into there also. Under the worst case, you would have to dump the water
catch once a day in warmer weather, which really isn't much of a
nuisance.
Eric
|
150.280 | | TEKTRM::REITH | Jim Reith DTN 235-8459 HANNAH::REITH | Tue May 23 1989 16:42 | 2 |
| Just strap it to the wall over the washer and let it drain into the washing
machine outlet...
|
150.281 | | TOKLAS::FELDMAN | PDS, our next success | Tue May 23 1989 19:12 | 13 |
| Sorry. I would have hoped that you'd give me credit for having thought
of and eliminated the obvious suggestions. The washer is on the first
floor. The outgoing pipe to the septic tank is at chest height in the
basement, all the other drain pipes in the basement are at joist level,
and there are no fixtures with drains in the basement, so piping the
water into the existing drain system isn't a realistic option. I'm not
about to pay for a pump to raise the water above the outgoing drain
line, or to pay for a plumber to connect to the drain (this is MA).
The only reasonable options are to send the water out the back door
manually or pipe it outside some other way.
Gary
|
150.282 | condensate pump it | NYEM1::MILBERG | Barry Milberg | Thu May 25 1989 00:03 | 9 |
| use an air conditioning condensate pump.
I raised the de-humidifier and feed it, by hose into the condensate
pump for the central ac. If you don't have central a/c, buy a
condensate pump and then run the little (3/8 or 1/2) plastic line
outside.
-Barry-
|
150.283 | When to open basement windows? | CARTUN::MANN | | Fri Jun 02 1989 17:51 | 14 |
| I have been using a dehumidifier in our basement with a noticeable
degree of successful, compared to when we didn't have one down there.
The question I have, however, is that knowing that leaving the
basement windows open also helps to ventilate the basement, should the
windows remain open when the dehumidifier is going, or kept closed?
I have assumed that keeping them closed makes senses since you would do
the same with air conditioning, but wanted to hear what others felt on
this.
Thanks,
/am
|
150.284 | Leave the windows closed during humid weather | CSMET2::CHACE | let's go fishin' | Mon Jun 05 1989 14:08 | 13 |
|
Because of the coolness of a basement and the high relative humidity
of the summer air you should NOT normally open your basement windows
unless the outside air is COOLER than the basement AND is lower
in humidity than the basement. You must realize that temp. greatly
affects humidity. IF it's say 75 outside and 60% Relative Humidity
and you open your basement windows to allow this air in, the cooling
of that air in the basment will make the basement humidity go higher
than the 60% depending on how much you cool the air. The best thing
to do through the humid summer months is keep the basement windows
colsed and run the dehumidifier. An exception to this would be if
you have a problem with water in your basement or moisture coming
through the walls.
|
150.341 | damtite sealant | QBUS::MULLINS | | Thu Nov 09 1989 13:54 | 17 |
| Has Anyone ever used a product called damtite to seal basement
walls. Supposedly you must first wet the walls then apply this
stuff with a brush.
I have a minor leak only when it rains extremely heavy. There is
a crack running vertically from about 2" from the basement floor
to the sill plate. Crack is only about 1/8" - 1/4" wide worst case.
I want to seal all the walls, and I also plan on using thompsons
on the floors. I beleive for the most part that the water is leaking
through the crack mostly due to improper grading on the outside
and possibly clogged gutters. I think this stiff will also act to
seal the cracks as well.
your input is appreaiated.
Drew
|
150.342 | 1926, 1111.12 | BEING::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Thu Nov 09 1989 14:20 | 18 |
| This note has been temporarily write-locked pending approval of the author.
To the author: This subject is already under discussion in this file, under the
topics listed in the title. Please look at these notes; you may find that your
question is already answered, or you may find a note where your question would
be an appropriate continuation of the discussion. Note that since nearly
everyone uses NEXT UNSEEN to read notes, your question will get the same
exposure whether it is a response to a two-year-old note or it is its own new
note. These topics were found using the keyword directory (note 1111), and you
may find other notes relating to this subject by examining the directory
yourself.
We do, however, welcome new notes if they explore a specific aspect of a
problem that may be under general discussion. And this moderator has been
known to make mistakes. :^) So if after examining these notes, you wish to
continue the discussion here, send me mail.
Paul [Moderator]
|
150.285 | looking for quiet dehumidifiers | DSTEG2::HUGHES | | Wed Nov 22 1989 13:48 | 6 |
| Are there any dehumidifiers that are reasonably quiet? I bought one
last year that is very noisy. Now that we are using the cellar more
then before I'm interested in reducing the noise.
Linda
|
150.172 | Moved from old note 3706 | CSSE::OPERATIONS | | Fri Feb 09 1990 16:35 | 16 |
| I've looked through the notes keyword=basement but could not find any
answers.
After 25 years in the house we have started to get water in the
basement after a heavy rain. This has happened twice and has ruined
the playroom (also the floor at the bottom of the heater shows rusty).
I need to get this fixed ASAP. What should I look for other than
cracks in the wall. The water was even when we discovered it, so I
don't know where it's coming in.
Any suggestions you have for me to check this out will be greatly
appreciated.
Thanks
Wilma
|
150.173 | | ALLVAX::DIAMOND | No brag, Just fact. | Fri Feb 09 1990 17:46 | 6 |
|
There are companies that will waterproof your cellar without having
to dig up around your foundation. Some offer a lifetime gurantee.
Lenox the heating company is one, and I've seen many others.
Mike
|
150.174 | Latest issue of CR | SNELL::BARTLETT | | Fri Feb 09 1990 17:54 | 10 |
| Re. .1
I believe that most of the companies that will waterproof your cellar
without digging up the foundation use a sodium bentonite slurry.
The latest issue (maybe second to the last issue, come to think
about it) of Consumer's Reports had a pretty good article on basement
waterproofing, and they distinctly said that this was not a good
solution.
Greg B.
|
150.175 | See also keyword basement-waterproofing: 1111.12 | BEING::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Mon Feb 12 1990 14:12 | 18 |
| This note has been temporarily write-locked pending approval of the author.
To the author: This subject is already under discussion in this file, under the
topics listed in the title. Please look at these notes; you may find that your
question is already answered, or you may find a note where your question would
be an appropriate continuation of the discussion. Note that since nearly
everyone uses NEXT UNSEEN to read notes, your question will get the same
exposure whether it is a response to a two-year-old note or it is its own new
note. These topics were found using the keyword directory (note 1111), and you
may find other notes relating to this subject by examining the directory
yourself.
We do, however, welcome new notes if they explore a specific aspect of a
problem that may be under general discussion. And this moderator has been
known to make mistakes. :^) So if after examining these notes, you wish to
continue the discussion here, send me mail.
Paul [Moderator]
|
150.41 | What, me worry about water? | VAXRT::HOLTORF | | Thu Mar 01 1990 13:24 | 19 |
| I've had water in my celler three out of the last ten years. I store
alot of stuff down there (no attic,no garage), clothes, books, sewing,
motorcycle, washer/dryer. We put everything up on blocks or skids.
Two or three inches is enuf. We put in a hole at the lowest spot in
the floor.
When it floods we drop in the pump and run the hose out the
bulkhead to the driveway and street. the pump has an auto on/off
switch. We use a dehumidifier to dry things out when the ground water
finally drops. This cost about $200.
The pump sucks the celler down to "puddles" pretty quickly.
Even in the worst year it only lasted about two weeks in the spring.
And when it drys out my celler floor is clean!
I remember my parents had the same situation in their house
when I was a kid. When we started to drive my mother buggy she'd
put our rubber boots on and send us down celler with our squirt guns
and sailboats. Great fun!
When it was dry they threw old matteresses on the floor and
turned it into a tumbling room. My mother, upstairs in the kitchen,
must have thought she was in heaven.
|
150.286 | Any formulas available? | KRAPPA::BILODEAU | So many TSRs, so little memory. | Mon Jun 18 1990 17:58 | 14 |
| Is there a formula that can tell you what size dehumidifier you need?
Like you have 90% RH in a certain size room and want to get it to
45% RH. How many pints of water are talking about removing from the
air?
For instance, say you have a room that has 1400 cubic feet of capacity.
It is now at 90% RH. You want to get it to 45% RH in 4 hours. Are
there formulas to figure this out? How do you know you're buying a
dehumidifier that's to big or too small?
Thanks, (building a sealed room in a concrete basement)
Gerry
|
150.287 | | DICKNS::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Mon Jun 18 1990 18:12 | 16 |
| re: .51
I think you're asking the wrong question. What you really need to
know is the rate at which moisture is re-entering the air from the
concrete, from humid outside air infiltrating around windows and
down the stairs, from drying clothes, etc. Who cares if it takes
3 days for the dehumidifier running nonstop to get the humidity down
to the level you want, if after that time the dehumidifier has to
run only 2 hours a day to maintain that level? In that case, one would
say that probably you could get by with a smaller unit. If, on the
other hand, the dehumidifier has to run 23.9 hours a day to maintain
"steady state," then one would probably want something a bit larger.
My approach was to buy the biggest unit Spag's had at the time. It
seems to work pretty well. If at all possible, set it up with a
hose to be self-draining.
|
150.288 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jun 18 1990 19:03 | 5 |
| The latest Consumer Reports has an article on dehumidifiers. They recommended
buying a bigger model, as they were more efficient and would just run less
when the humidity was low.
Steve
|
150.289 | Want room not too hot. | KRAPPA::BILODEAU | So many TSRs, so little memory. | Tue Jun 19 1990 13:11 | 15 |
| re .52 & .53
Thanks.
I was also thinking of building the dehumidifier into a wall. Can
you do that or does it have to be entirely in the room? I also do
not want the temperature of the room to exceed 72 degrees or so.
Will the heat generated by the unit cause me problems in a well
insulated room? I plan on having a heater in the room if it gets
to chilly but I wouldn't want to have to air-condition it.
Thanks again.
Gerry
|
150.290 | | R2ME2::BENNISON | Victor L. Bennison DTN 381-2156 ZK2-3/R56 | Tue Jun 19 1990 13:21 | 10 |
| 1. It will not generate enough heat to cause a significant rise in the
room temperature.
2. The dehumidifier needs air circulation to take the humidity out of
the air. Building it into the wall may restrict the flow of air
and reduce the efficiency of the unit.
3. I bought a Sears model ten years ago and it has been running all
summer ever since almost non-stop. I got the mid-rage model, not
the biggest. Never any problems at all.
- Vick
|
150.291 | | WARLCK::RAMSEY_B | Put the wet stuff on the red stuff | Tue Jun 19 1990 13:47 | 7 |
| The humidifer may generate some heat but not enough to the room temp.
go up.
Air conditioners work using two principles together. First they
actually cool the air and secondly they reduce humidity. Dry air is
easier to cool than moist air and it feels cooler. A humidifer will
remove the moisture and make the room *feel* cooler.
|
150.292 | | HKFINN::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Tue Jun 19 1990 14:28 | 6 |
| You can't really build it in - you need unrestricted airflow through
it.
Check the nameplate to see how much current it draws; that's how
much it will heat the room. If it draws, say, 100 watts, then it
will be like having a 100-watt lightbulb on when it's running.
It shouldn't be enough to worry about.
|
150.293 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Jun 19 1990 15:31 | 5 |
| I disagree with those who say a dehumidifier doesn't warm a room. It
certainly does. All the heat energy has to go somewhere... It's not like
running a heater, but it definitely warms the air overall.
Steve
|
150.294 | | R2ME2::BENNISON | Victor L. Bennison DTN 381-2156 ZK2-3/R56 | Tue Jun 19 1990 17:42 | 2 |
| Even with the dehumidifier running full-time, my basement is still by
far the coolest place in my house in the summer. - Vick
|
150.295 | Self-Emptying Built-In | EBISVX::HQCONSOL | | Tue Jun 19 1990 18:00 | 8 |
| When I finished a basement room several years ago I built the
dehumidifier into a wall (side of closet wall). The air intake
is in the fron of the unit (exposed to the finished room). I
ran a hose from the dehumidfier water tank, behind the stud wall
to the sump hole in the unfinished basement workshop. This eliminates
the need for emtying. The humidifier DOES raise the room temp
from the moist air temp. However, the dry temp in the basement is
stiul COOLER than the upstairs.
|
150.296 | I think I've got now! | KRAPPA::BILODEAU | So many TSRs, so little memory. | Wed Jun 20 1990 14:25 | 6 |
| re .55 - .60
Thanks to all.
Gerry
|
150.42 | Help with CRACK and WATER | ENOVAX::ZELISKO | | Fri Aug 17 1990 19:43 | 21 |
| Can anyone help me with a dependable fix for a crack I have in
my cellar wall. The crack runs the entire height of the wall from
the top sill to the cellar floor. Note #2892 describes this condition
but not any fixes.
Whenever it rains the water comes seeping into my cellar. After the
heavy rain we had in August I had on average 5 gallons a day to
clean up. I've tried UGL paint and a hydrolic cement applied to
the surface crack. But after 3 months the crack reappears and in
comes the water again.
Does anyone know of a GOOD product or process that can fix this
condition and thus prevent the water from seeping in. Any help or
advice will be greatly appreciated!!!
Ed
P.S. - Re .39 - I also got a quote from the B-dry people. They want
to cut trenches and holes and install a sump pump. The price: $1400.
|
150.43 | | CSC32::GORTMAKER | whatsa Gort? | Sat Aug 18 1990 02:19 | 4 |
| Silicone caulking worked in a crack in my basement that formerly consumed
hydroloc cement by the pound it expands when the crack does.
-j
|
150.44 | Quick fixes don't last! | PFSVAX::PETH | Critter kids | Mon Aug 20 1990 12:41 | 7 |
| The permanent fix would be to dig out the backfill outside the house,
apply a heavy layer of waterproofing cement and install a french drain.
Replace the backfill with gravel or sandy soil, anything but clay. Yes,
this is a lot of work, but you would never have water in the basement
again.
Sandy
|
150.45 | | ULTRA::SEKURSKI | | Mon Aug 20 1990 16:05 | 16 |
|
Basically that's what the developer did for my house. When the
ground thawed in the Spring we noticed water coming in through
a long crack in the foundation. Since the house was *guaranteed*
for the first year we called him in to fix it.
He drilled the length of the crack with a hammer drill put in
hydraulic cement then on the outside he dug down the length
of the crack did the same thing then applyed tar over that.
We also have a foundation drain (perforated pipe) all around
the foundation so that probably helps also.
Mike
----
|
150.46 | second that opinion | LEVERS::S_JACOBS | Live Free and Prosper | Tue Sep 04 1990 16:35 | 5 |
| We also have had good luck with silicone caulk. My wife used a whole
tube on one floor-to-ceiling crack, and it's been bone dry ever since.
It'll only cost you $5 and a half hour's work to try it!
Steve
|
150.47 | Damtite | MILKWY::WATSON | Discover the USA next vacation | Fri Sep 28 1990 16:27 | 15 |
|
I just applied a generous double coating of Damtite to my
basement floor and halfway up the walls. This stuff seems
like it can do the job I needed done.
I had water soaking thru from the base of the house during
winter and spring rains. The Damtite cost me about $200 to
do my 24x38 basement. It appears to be a white cement based
product. You mix a small batch and paint it on. Pretty simple.
I could only find it at Home Depot in Berlin CT.
Has anyone else used this stuff?
Bob
|
150.48 | French drain questions | RUTLND::MCMAHON | Quality doesn't cost, it pays! | Mon Oct 01 1990 15:59 | 16 |
| Can anyone give me some specifics on doing a French drain? I've read
the previous notes and replies that concerned French drains but I still
have a few questions. Since my problem is that my house is basically
built on top of a stream, I was planning on putting the drain on the
inside. I have seen it mentioned to plan on making the trench 12" wide
by 12" deep. How far away from the basement wall should I make the
trench? I've also seen in here to use 4" perf pipe with the holes up.
(I've also seen someone say the holes face down). I also imagine that
one would like at least a small slope to the pipes leading to the sump
pump?!? What kind of stone should I put down, also how much under the
perf pipe? How can I estimate how much (tonnage?yards?) stone I'll need.
Any reference source anyone could recommend on the proper way to do a
French drain is also welcome.
Thanks.
|
150.49 | | HKFINN::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Mon Oct 01 1990 16:25 | 3 |
| Holes DOWN. The water rises up into the pipe. If you put the
holes on top, the water has to get up to the top of the pipe
before it can get in.
|
150.50 | Advice needed on water drainage | MAY10::STOJDA | | Thu Nov 29 1990 16:07 | 47 |
| I am in the process of having a house built and though I had planned
well for any possible water problems.
The basement floor is to have a 4" bed of crushed stone covered by
6-mil poly and then 4" concrete.
The foundation walls are to have 2 coats of asphalt applied. I planned
for a perimeter drain (4" perforated pipe drained to daylight) covered
by felt paper, sitting on top of 6" of crushed stone. I also specified
coarse fill extending 3 feet away from the foundation walls going from
the top of the perimeter drain to 6" below the surface.
The reason I had planned this system is beacuse I knew most of the soil
was clay. Also, there is the potential for the groundwater level
rising and I wanted to prevent water in my basement.
Sounds good? Low and behold the local board of health told me I could
not have the perimeter drain which takes water away from the
foundation, because it was too close to the leaching fields. The
theory is that the draining water will act as an aspirator, sucking
effluent from the leaching field towards the house. Since I can not move
the leaching fields or the house, I am not sure what to do.
Since I can no longer have a perimeter drain, the excavator said I
should not put the coarse fill around the outside of the foundation.
He said the water will drain here (path of least resistance) and stay
up against the wall. He suggested putting the clay-soil back against
outside walls.
He also suggested putting a perimeter drain along the inner-side of the
footings and having it lead to a low point. At the low point, he would
place an up-side-down plastic bucket. The crushed stone, 6mil poly,
and concrete would cover the bucket. The theory is that if water
problems ever developed, a hole could easily be made through the
basement floor to the bucket and a sump pump placed there.
What do you folks think?
I am not so worried about rain water. The house will have gutters with
the water drained far enough away from the house and the ground will
also be sloped away from the house. My main worry is the potential for
the groundwater to rise in the spring.
Your comments/suggestions are welcome.
- Mike
|
150.51 | | KOALA::DIAMOND | No brag, Just fact. | Fri Nov 30 1990 13:17 | 14 |
|
re .50
That's very interesting!!!
My tenant sells this basement waterproofing system by Owens Corning
called Tuff & Dry. In order to put the system a perimieter drain must
be built. He sells this stuff in NH and Mass. And as of right now it's
the only only approved system in both states.
From what I've read a peremiter drain is the only way to go. But I'm
far from an expert.
Mike
|
150.52 | Thought about Tuff-N-Dry | MAY10::STOJDA | | Fri Nov 30 1990 15:02 | 8 |
| re .51
I had planned to go with the Tuff-N-Dry but after I had to drop the
perimeter drain, I was told that they would still do it, but not give
the waterproof warrenty. Too bad, I felt that for the extra $$, the
10 year guarantee was great.
- Mike
|
150.53 | Sounds wacky to me... | SALEM::LAYTON | | Fri Nov 30 1990 17:55 | 7 |
| Install the perimeter drain and put a plug in the end of the pipe to
disable it. If you ever get water in the cellar, pull the plug. If
you ever get dark, moonless nites, pull the plug and leave it out. If
having a perimeter drain can syphon from the leach field, so can your
whole darn basement!
Let your common sense be your guide...
|
150.54 | No Clay! | PFSVAX::PETH | Critter kids | Thu Dec 06 1990 18:45 | 7 |
| re:50
Clay backfill is a wonderful way to cave in your basement walls from
hydralic pressure. In my area PGH,PA perimeter drains are required by
code, I find what you are hearing, hard to believe! I would find a way
to go with the original plan, if the drain could affect the leachfield,
the leachfield is too close to the house to be healthful.
|
150.55 | time to dust off my CE degree | XK120::SHURSKY | Jaguar enthusiast. | Fri Dec 07 1990 11:55 | 46 |
| Actually proximity has little to do with it. It has more to do with grade and
soil conditions. Ground water, like all water, tends to run down hill. There
is some capillary action in soil (the amount depends on soil type) which can
negate some slope. Generally, the water table follows the lay of the land with
it being farther from the surface on the hills (again depending on soil and
bedrock conditions) and possibly intersecting the land surface in the valleys
(this case is called a stream or spring). If the house lot is level a situation
like that below can develop:
undisturbed
________________________________________________________ ground surface
--------------------------------------------------------- water level
no flow across -> page - no slope
disturbed by a foundation
__ gravel fill
____________________________/_ ____________ ground surface
clay soil \ | |
================ \ | |
leach field/gravel bed \ | foundation |
---------------------. \ | |
flow -> `----- O|______________|
/ |
/ |__ drain leading out of page
water table
Here there will be a flow from the leach field towards the house because the
water table is drawn down by the drain. The rate of flow will depend on the
soils involved. There will be a constant flow from the drain as long as the
water table is above the drain. There will also be a flow toward the drain
(or else why install it) after a rain (or after a flush :-) even if the water
table is below the drain. (note: the water table must be below the leach
field or the system won't work - the land should not perc so a house wouldn't
be built here anyway) Generally speaking, if the leach field is below the
drain, there should not be a problem.
Anyway that's the hydraulic situation under discussion here.
Stan
|
150.56 | Built on swamp land? | SALEM::LAYTON | | Fri Dec 07 1990 12:02 | 5 |
| Don't they do a deep hole perc to find the highest water table level
where the house is built to make sure the basement floor is above it?
Why would you try to put a foundation deeper than the water table?
Carl
|
150.57 | Ground level = water table = swamp | XK120::SHURSKY | Jaguar enthusiast. | Fri Dec 07 1990 12:32 | 22 |
| Swamp land is where the ground level is equal to the water table. It is quite
common to site houses where the water table is above the basement floor. Most
of RI is an example of this. I had a friend in RI who built a house and had to
truck in $10K of bank run gravel to raise his back yard about 4-6 feet for his
leach field. He had to put in a pump to pump the effluvium uphill to the leach
field. The pump blew a fuse when the wiring got wet once and stopped. He had
no alarm. It was an unpleasant situation.
My house in North Andover is probably an example of this as well. It is sited
on a granite ledge. They had to blast to get the foundation and septic tank
in the ground. Any water that happens to fall around my house is going to enter
the ground and go down until it hits bedrock and sit there. My foundation is
on bedrock. Thus, the bottom of my foundation will be sitting in water. Good
grading has given me a dry basement in the wettest weather. My leach field is
over the edge of the ledge in the front lawn and lower than my basement. This
means a pretty good grade to my driveway (but I always liked looking down on
my neighbors ;-)
Remember water always takes the path of leas resistance. If it is easier for
the water to flow toward the drain it will.
Stan
|
150.58 | Damtite working...so far | MILKWY::WATSON | Discover the USA next vacation | Thu Dec 20 1990 16:20 | 16 |
|
Just a quick update on the basement sealer I used back in
note 150.47, Damtite.
We've had several good soaking this fall/winter so far and
no trace of any water seepage. I would have sumped and pumped
100's of gallons by this time last year with the same rain.
I'm not yet fully convinced enough to put expensive things
down there on the floor but if by springtime there is still
no water, I'll be very satisfied. At this point, I'd recommend
giving it a try for anyone with the same problem I encountered
in my basement.
Bob
|
150.176 | Moved from old note 4209 | ISLNDS::LAUBACH | | Thu May 02 1991 12:09 | 22 |
| I previously had just a crawl space under my house. I had the house raised
and how have a cellar that a person can stand up in. However, I have a dirt
floor covered with black plastic and when it rains, the ground water comes
up under the plastic in spots. It has never flooded.
I would like to eventually move my hot water tank to the basement and maybe
put a furnace down there (currently have a gas wall vented heater in the
kitchen). Before doing either of these, I would like to have a way to
remove the ground water when necessary and cement the cellar.
I'm not sure what needs to be done...is it expenstive....can it be done in
steps?
I thought that probably would have to dig a trench to carry the water to
one spot and install a sump pump to remove the water. Do I fill the trench
with gravel....or install fexible xxx pipes (can't recall what it is called
but has holes to let the water in). How deep does the trench have to be?
Do I cover the whole floor with gravel before the cement is poured...or
what???
Thanks for any suggestions...
Connie
|
150.177 | Discussed ad nauseum, See 1111.12 Basement Waterproofing | ODIXIE::RAMSEY | Put the Environment First | Thu May 02 1991 12:47 | 16 |
|
This note has been temporarily write-locked pending approval of the author.
This subject is already under discussion in this file, in the topics listed in
the title. Please look at these notes; you may find that your question is
already answered, or you may find a note where your question is an appropriate
continuation of the discussion. These were found using the keyword directory
(note 1111), and you may find other notes relating to this subject by examining
the directory yourself. Nearly all the people likely to respond use NEXT
UNSEEN, so a response to an old note will get the same exposure as a new note.
We do welcome new notes if they explore a specific aspect of a problem that may
be under general discussion. And moderators do make mistakes. ;^) So if after
examining these notes, you wish to continue the discussion here, send mail.
Bruce [co-moderator]
|
150.178 | more questions | ISLNDS::LAUBACH | | Tue Jun 04 1991 18:25 | 10 |
| I have checked the other notes but did not find any dealing with
quite the same situation that I have....digging a trench inside
the basement. Also have thought of a couple of more questions....Does
the dirt floor have to be level or can the leveling be done with
the sand/gravel? Can I cement the basement in sections?...do one
section this year...another section next year...etc. (Don't really
have the $$$ to contract the job out ...)
Thanks -
Connie
|
150.208 | Another water-in-basement problem... | RANGER::DAVE | | Thu Aug 22 1991 17:08 | 11 |
| Novice question...
I'm in the middle stages of building a new house (putting the siding up
right now). Last week I noticed a puddle of water where the wall meets
the floor. After Hurricane Bob, I noticed a few LARGE puddles. The
puddles weren't near the basement windows, so I know that wasn't the
cause of the leaks. Now, the builder says it leaked because
the land hasn't been backfilled yet...can this be true or is he trying
to hide something which will have to be fixed later? Thanks.
-SKD-
|
150.209 | Similar to .0 please advise | CSDNET::DICASTRO | RE-NOTE CONTROL | Mon Aug 26 1991 20:01 | 60 |
|
I am going to attempt to install the "recommended" solution for a basement
water problem. I have a high water table, efloresence (SP?) on the walls, a
crack in the floor , and leaks at the floor wall seam. The only time I get
water is during the spring rainy season (N.E. Mass), and when we get hurricanes
AKA:Bob/5" rain. I usually get from puddles, to an inch of water. Enough of
the description.
As I understand the way to "solve" this, is to alleviate the water (hydrostatic)
pressure , that builds up under the slab, and hence, solve the problem. The
method (as I understand it) is to remove a section of the floor 6" away from the
wall , 1 foot wide, and 1 foot deep. Put in a layer of gravel, and then add
a drain pipe (pipe riddled w/ holes in a single line), pitched to one corner
of the cellar, where I would need to install a "water collection box" (some
precast concrete) 2'x 2'x 1' deep, along w/ an industrial grade sump pump (and
a back up generator for power outages ;^) )
Then cover the darain pipe w/ either some plastic/sand/cement, or gravel/cement.
I have a few questions (considering, I am going to demolish my finished cellar
prior to doing this!).
1) the slab is an 1 1/2 to 2" thick, if you could get either a concrete
saw/blade, or a jack hammer for a similar price, which would you use ?
and what are the pros -vs- cons
2) more important than 1, is there any flwas in the proposed solution ?
and is there an easier way ?
3) what is the orientation of the drain holes , I have heard up, down., and on
the side. (The argument for the side orientation seems the most likley)
4) I have a woodstove on a brick base ~ 6' x 8' , that is situated in a
corner and I was going to work the drain/trench along its baorder instead
of removing it. Any problems here ?
5) I have dimensions of 40 x 20, so the 4 walls x 2 cuts (one for each side of
the trench =~ 240 l ft. of cutting. Also , I need ~200 cu. ft. of gravle, what
does this equate to in tonage, or yardage ?
6) Any creative ideas on resource management ? Somebody mentioned, piling the
removed gravel/sand to create a "pool" in the center of the floor to contain the
concrete mixing, and add the sane the the mix as iti is done. I also need to get
the removed concrete slab out, get the gravel in etc.... I have a walk out
basement.
7) Is the dead of winter a good time? The slab is 5 to 6 feet below the ground.
8) Will it work ? And ignoring the demolition; how long will it take to
a) cut / remove the floor
b) dig out the trench
c) install the gravel/pipe
d) cover it w/ either palstic/sand or gravel
e) redo the slab
f) cleen
g) have a cold one
Although I have done mucho home projects, this one is new to me. Any help is
greatly appreciated.
|
150.210 | We had this done 5 years ago | STAR::DZIEDZIC | | Tue Aug 27 1991 10:24 | 55 |
| Sounds very similar to a water-proofing job we had done in our
previous house. It worked very well, although there seems to
be some "market reluctance" towards houses with sump pumps (at
least that's what a few realtors told me - seems to me a dry
basement with a sump pump is better than a wet basement without
a sump pump, but what do I know?
The work was done by New England Basement Waterproofing. They
used a jack hammer to cut the slab about 8-12 inches in from the
exterior foundation wall, then removed the concrete from that
cut up to the foundation wall (leaving the footing intact).
It would likely take FOREVER to use a concrete saw.
They dug down at least a foot below slab level, placed some
LARGE crushed stone (1-2 inch, I believe) at the bottom of the
trench, then the black plastic perforated pipe, leading to a
plastic sump liner in one corner of the floor (they cut a larger
hole in the corner to place the liner). More large crushed stone
was added to cover the pipe up to the level of the slab. I didn't
see how they oriented the holes, but I believe they said DOWN.
When they re-cemented the area, they temporarily placed a 1x6
parallel to the foundation wall so as to leave a narrow (3/4 inch)
slot to collect any seepage which would come through foundation
tie pin holes, cracks, etc., in the foundation wall; the 1x6 was
removed after the concrete had set up. They used a small mixer
to mix up the concrete.
They did "detour" along an oil tank like you'd like to do with
your wood stove.
I'd suggest against re-using the material you dig out of the trench;
you're only supposed to use clean sand & gravel (too much "dirt"
will weaken the concrete). They hauled the scrap out via the
bulkhead. There was a fair amount (a small dump truck full) of
"scrap" material.
BE forewarned - you WILL have concrete dust over EVERYTHING. Use
plastic, tarps, etc., to cover anything important.
You might want to look into a battery-operated "backup" pump; I
believe they sold for $150-200 when I looked several years back.
Our job was done in early March (just before we received about 4
inches of rain - an excellent check of the new system). N.E.
Basement Waterproofing did a good job, and even came out on their
own the following year to replacement the sump pump because they
were having a rash of bad pumps (bad production run was how the
guy explained it to me).
A four-man crew took 1-1/2 days for the entire job. I'm not sure
I'd jump at this job. We paid about $4500 for a 24x36 basement.
That included a lifetime warranty, transferable to the new owner.
Any other questions, feel free to send mail or call.
|
150.211 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Tue Aug 27 1991 11:30 | 3 |
| The holes go DOWN; the idea is for the water to rise up into the
pipe as the groundwater level rises, and then it has a place to
go. The water isn't coming from the top, anyway!
|
150.212 | foot drains... | ASD::DIGRAZIA | | Tue Aug 27 1991 14:49 | 9 |
|
Re .29: Now, the builder says it leaked because
the land hasn't been backfilled yet...can this be true or is he trying
to hide something which will have to be fixed later?
Did the builder install footing drains? I think some communities
require footing drains.
Regards, Robert.
|
150.213 | | ELWOOD::LANE | | Thu Aug 29 1991 19:55 | 9 |
| >1) the slab is an 1 1/2 to 2" thick, if you could get either a concrete
>saw/blade, or a jack hammer for a similar price, which would you use ?
>and what are the pros -vs- cons
When I did this, I used a sledge hammer. It takes a little longer until
you get the hang of it but it's cheaper and quieter and it raises a lot
less dust.
Mickey.
|
150.214 | before you spend $4500 | GIAMEM::RIDGE | How can I miss U if U wont go away? | Wed Sep 11 1991 16:36 | 32 |
| Before you go through all that expense try this: Locate the lowest
corner of your basement suitable for a pump. Punch a hole in the floor
with a sledge hammer just wide enough to accept a 5 gal bucket (like
an empty joint compound bucket..even comes with a handle and a
sealable cover)
Dig out the whole deep enough to accept the 5gal pail. Put some gravel
at the bottom of the whole, put some 1/4" holes in the bottom of the
bucket. Buy a submersible sump pump for about $100. Run the drain up
and out to your favorite location.
Total cost = $105 for the pump.
Now, if your house was built with a full cement basement, there
probably is a layer of gravel under the cement slab floor. (you'll be
able to tell when you go through the floor) Since you are trying to
releive the hydro(something) pressure, you have done that by providing
a point on the floor plane where there is less pressure, ie the bucket.
The water will (should) flow under the cement slab toward the bucket.
You are giving the water place to go.
I worked for me.
Haven't had water for several years. However, three years ago we put on
an addition and at the same time had some drains run away from the house.
(Three of four downspouts, and a drain at the foundation base)
Pump hasn't come on since, but I still have it hooked up. I am not
ready to dismantle yet. I'll wait for a weekend of 7" of rain. Then
I'll be more comfortable.
|
150.59 | questions and figure$ | CSDNET::DICASTRO | Reputed lobster | Tue Feb 11 1992 15:01 | 60 |
| I am currently in the process of installing a perimeter drainage system
and have a question or two (followed by some interesting figure$).
My cellar is approx. 20 x 30 , I am running 4" pref. drainage pipe
to a sump pit, along 3 of the walls.
1) how big should the sump pit be ?
(a 5 gal. joint compound bucket, a kitchen barrel, or what ?)
2) Is a submersable pump better than the tall ones ?
(pros -vs- cons)
3) What is a good brand of the recomended pump ?
(I have heard the Zoeller submersable pump is a good one)
Oh yeah..
4) Should the sump pit barrell, be encased (bottom,sides...)
in concrete, or perforated and in contact w/ the ground ?
(to allow ground water to flow in)
I appreciate any info you can provide...
Interesting fact$ :
I had 2 companys come out to do the estimates for the perimeter
drainage system, Be dry, and another. Each estimate was in the 4k
range (actually more).
My actual costs so far are:
Electric jack hammer rental 117.60
4" pipe, elbows, t's , caps ~50.00
ledger board (for small form
around clean-out, & sump pit) 14.64
Material removal(cement and
gravel) 100.00
2 yds. 3/4" stone 64.10
landscaping fabric 18.80
---------------------------------------------
My only other costs should be concrete (I am using ready-mix) the truck
comes, and yu pay for what you use. estimate 2 yds.... ($40.00[?])
And a pump ~ 150.00 (?)
This along w/ 40 hrs of my labor, for a grand total of $ 455.14
a net savings of $ 3,500.00.
FYI, the landscaping fabric will go in the trench prior to the gravel.
It is screen-like material, which will not rot. This will help keep
silt, gravel, and sand from entering the drainage system, which will
prolong the life of the pump, reduce the servicing intervals, and help
to prevent the undermining of the foundation due to water flow (if you
prevent the sand from entering the trench, it will stay put.....).
rgds/Bob
|
150.60 | | FLOWER::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Feb 11 1992 16:06 | 23 |
| Bob,
Can't answer all your questions, but, I'll take a stab at some.
I lived in two houses that each had a similar system that you have.
First of all, after the water is pumped out of the house, where does
it go? I had a plastic pipe that started at the pump, went out the
house just above the foundation, then down to the street, under my
front lawn (lets not start arguing about the legal aspects of
discharging onto the street...please). I drilled a small hole in a
90 degree elbow at the highest part in the discharge pipe path,
so that I would not suck the water back into the sump pit when
the pump turned off. Note: You need to have very good drainage to the
discharge pipe......otherwise it can freeze up in the cold part of the
season, like March( ground still cold).
Second, I used a flue tile as a sump pump hole liner on one house
(8x11)...worked fine. I would just make sure that the sides ahave holes
in them, and the bottom is open.
Use a good brand of pump, and get a stand by generator for when the
power fails. You WILL need it!
Marc, voice of experience, Hildebrant
|
150.61 | | CLTMAX::freb | Karl Freburger Object-based Systems | Wed Feb 12 1992 12:00 | 23 |
| A standby generator is a good idea, but the people who installed my
drainage system had another suggestion: buy a cheap bilge pump at a
marine supply store. Rig up an extension cord that you can connect the
pump to at one end, and your car battery at the other (preferably without
having to remove the battery from the car--otherwise you'll kill it the
first time you have to use it for more than 10 minutes). Probably would
work just fine for emergencies. They also installed a submersible pump
(at my request--they seem to be much quieter), and put in a quick disconnect
fitting so I could use one of my old pedestal pumps as a backup, too, in
case the submersible ever failed. And I did have a submersible fail once.
- karl
PS. Bob, you may be able to get away with doing your installation for
lots less money than the quotes you were given, but I'm glad I went
with a pro. They ran into lots of ledge and rock when they were jack
hammering, and I'm sure I wouldn't have wanted to deal with that. Also,
our water problem is very severe, and that written, lifetime-of-the-house
guarantee makes me feel better. And I'm sure that it will make our house more
marketable than if I had done the work myself (we just had the drainage
installed, and the house goes on the market Monday--no time to really find
out if it works if I do it myself). There are tradeoffs both ways...
|
150.62 | | CSC32::S_MAUFE | third different screen and keyboard this week! | Wed Feb 12 1992 16:34 | 23 |
|
we have a sump pump that is on a pole, and I like it that way. Just
this weekend I took the thing apart and cleaned it all up.
we have a pit about 2ft in diameter and 6ft deep. The sides are porous
and the previous owner used a bucket or somesuch to stop the walls
falling in.
Dumb basement design follows,
6" wall
| |||
| p ||| basement floor
| i |---------------------------------------------------
| t |
------
so the water had to rise 6" before it would go into the pit! I spent a
good few hours and layers of skin chipping a canal thru the wall so the
basement would drain into the pit!
Simon
|
150.63 | | FLOWER::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Wed Feb 12 1992 17:36 | 11 |
| Re: .62
The idea is to pump the water out from under the basement floor, so
that it will not get the floor wet.
Having the top part removed is a good idea incase the floor does get
water on it from another source.
Not trying to be a smart a$%!
Marc H.
|
150.64 | | CSC32::S_MAUFE | third different screen and keyboard this week! | Wed Feb 12 1992 21:34 | 11 |
|
I dug the Maufe-Panama-Mini-Canal becuase twice this winter we had a
flooded basement, that DIDN'T drain into the sump pit.
First time the bottom of the cold water tank leaked and we didn't
notice. 2nd time the pressure valve that controls the well pump sprung a
leak and again flooded the basement. So, I realise the sump pump is to
stop the water rising up to the level of the basement floor, but its also
to pump out the basement when you have a mechanical failure.
Simon
|
150.65 | cost of concrete ... | CSDNET::DICASTRO | Reputed lobster | Fri Feb 21 1992 17:01 | 11 |
| FWIW:
I ordered redi-mix concrete, you pay for what you use. A Saturday
delevery of 2 yds. is ~ $200.00, not the $40.00 I had hoped for.
Still, if 1 80lb. bag = 2/3 cu. ft. then approx 40 , 80 lb. bags
= 1 cu. yd.
I would rather pay $ 200.00, than mix 80 bags, @ 80lbs. each.
rgds/Bob
|
150.66 | What type GRAVEL? | ISLNDS::LAUBACH | | Mon Mar 02 1992 13:06 | 11 |
| I'm going to be installing a sump pit and drainage ditch in my basement
and have gotten answers to most of my questions from reading previous
entries...except for one.
What type of gravel should be used? Is there a grade or size that I
ask for? I called one place and was told that I needed a good perk
gravel and not all Sand & Gravel Companies carry this. Is this
correct? Any idea about cost? Do you buy gravel by the yard?
Thanks -
Connie
|
150.67 | | FLOWER::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Mon Mar 02 1992 13:45 | 9 |
| You buy gravel by the cubic yard. Most times, the cost is the same
for part of a load versus a full load. Most times , you are talking
about 15 cubic yards. More than you need, but, I always get the full
load, and use the left-over for another project.
I would get pea size gravel. You don't want crushed rock or bank
gravel....its too fine.
Marc H.
|
150.68 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Mon Mar 02 1992 14:34 | 11 |
| re: .66
I'd get "peastone," which is small rounded rocks about 1/4"-1/2" dia.
That would allow good water flow, I would think.
It will probably be about $10/yard (guess).
I don't know where you are, but Assabet Sand & Gravel on route 62 in
Acton (?) Concord (?) Maynard (?) (one of those towns!) will let
you come in and shovel your own, if you just need a little bit. We
got some sand for a sandbox there last summer. Two trash cans full
cost about $2.
|
150.69 | | XANADU::RECKARD | Jon Reckard, 381-0878, ZKO3-2/T63 | Mon Mar 02 1992 15:56 | 13 |
| > I called one place and was told that I needed a good perk
> gravel and not all Sand & Gravel Companies carry this.
My guess is that this is something bigger than peastone (as I
understand it). The stones required (by the state of NH) for leach
fields (related to "perk"?) were more like 1" in diameter or so.
For basement drainage, it might not matter *too* much what size stones
you use, and maybe more important is how the stones are laid. You
might need something like screening or protection to keep the stone
from clogging up.
Ask the pros - not us. :) (Well, not me anyway.)
|
150.70 | | CSC32::S_MAUFE | third different screen and keyboard this week! | Mon Mar 02 1992 19:16 | 5 |
|
my sump pump is wrapped in a fine mesh, like you'd use for screen
doors, and has no gravel in the pit. Works fine.
Simon
|
150.71 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | DCU -- I'm making REAL CHOICES | Fri Apr 10 1992 13:51 | 13 |
|
I have a sump pump in the basement, which is fed by a plastic drain
along the walls. The drain is a plastic channel that is glued to the
floor with a small gap from the wall; the look is reminiscent of a
baseboard heater. I want to extend the channel to cover another wall.
/ | Does anyone know what this stuff is
| |w called and where I can find it?
channel| |a
*_ |l
===========|l
floor
|
150.72 | | STAR::DZIEDZIC | | Fri Apr 10 1992 15:18 | 2 |
| Check in the back pages of The Family Handyman; I believe this
stuff is made by Beaver Industries.
|
150.73 | HOLES or NO holes | ISLNDS::LAUBACH | | Fri Apr 10 1992 15:33 | 14 |
| I have a high water table and a dirt floor basement. I don't have
to dig very far down to hit water. I'm planning on
digging a drainage ditch (install drainage pipe & gravel) around the
inside of the basement to a sump hole; install sump pump in a plastic
barrel & set in sump hole & fill around barrel with gravel.
The drainage pipe will empty into the barrel.
My friend who is helping me with this project (isn't he great!!) and I
are having a disagreement about whether the barrel should have holes in
it or not? If so, at what level...near the bottom or at the point
'high water level'? Maybe it doesn't make any difference??
Thanks.
- Connie
|
150.74 | | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-04/S23 -- dtn 381-2684 | Fri Apr 10 1992 19:37 | 12 |
| I would put holes in the bottom and sides of the barrel (or
bucket?). My reason is that if I didn't do this water could
accumulate around the barrel and lift it up out of its hole via
hydrostatic pressure -- which is a $64 way of saying it might
float out of the ground.
I had a similar arrangement in a house I once owned and in the
condo where I used to live. Both sump containers had holes in or
near the bottom.
Having said this I'll stand back and get out of the way of all the
people who have contrary experience/opinions. :-)
|
150.75 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | DCU -- I'm making REAL CHOICES | Fri Apr 10 1992 20:05 | 15 |
|
As far as I can tell, the sump in my baselent is sealed; seepage from
the walls is channeled into it, but water is not allowed to come
from below.
My theory for your situation:
If I dug the hole for the sump, and water seeped into it, I think I
would put holes in the container only above the level that the water
reached. I would do this now, when the water table is highest.
My reasoning: if I put holes below the water table level, I could be
setting up the pump to draw down an aquifer of unknown size; the
pump could potentially run forever.
|
150.76 | | FLOWER::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Apr 14 1992 14:14 | 6 |
| Re: .73
I would put in as many holes as you can...everywhere, until more holes
would make the bucket to weak to hold its shape.
Marc H.
|
150.77 | where are those drains? | SSGV01::CHASE | | Fri Apr 24 1992 16:30 | 9 |
|
We have water that comes up through the floor of the basement of our 7 year old
house. The builder put in drains when the foundation was laid (I don't know if
he did it right!). Anyway, the first time we got water he said that the
drains must be blocked, but he didn't know where the outlet was!! Any ideas
on how to locate these things?
Barbara
|
150.78 | finding drain outlets | SMAUG::FLOWERS | IBM Interconnect Eng. | Mon Apr 27 1992 13:09 | 15 |
| >house. The builder put in drains when the foundation was laid (I don't know if
>he did it right!). Anyway, the first time we got water he said that the
>drains must be blocked, but he didn't know where the outlet was!! Any ideas
>on how to locate these things?
Hi Barbara,
Good question. I'd also like to know. Our house is supposed to have
foundation perimeter drains as well (at least according to septic design
plans) but we couldn't find any outlet pipes either. Someone later mentioned
to me that perimeter drains don't necessarily have to have an outlet that
breaks the surface.... (Doesn't sound right to me...anyone?)
Thx,
Dan
|
150.79 | | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Mon Apr 27 1992 13:44 | 17 |
| I suppose a perimeter drain that ends in a dry well would be ok -- for
draining away surface rain water that runs down the foundation. But
if the problem is due to the water table, then the dry well itself would
be flooded and a perimeter drain that doesn't break the surface would be
useless.
I wonder whether the person who installed the drains understands that water
can come *out* of a drain as well as going *into* a drain. Could the
basement flooding be due to water getting forced back up through the drains?
You might want to buy a cheap plumbers snake and try seeing how far you
can push it down the drain before there's a blockage. If the distance is
fairly short, then you might have a drain that simply stops in the ground
near the house. I'd be surprized if that helps at all.
Luck,
Larry
|
150.304 | Protect my basement with Sump Pump Backup | MISFIT::KINNEYD | Angst for the memories | Mon Jun 01 1992 14:09 | 33 |
| My new 15 year old house has a sump with a pump of the
non-submersable(sp) kind with the motor at the top, a shaft down into
the sump and the collection point at the bottom. This pump runs at
least once a day in the summer and many times a day in the spring or
wet seasons.
My problem is that I am finishing the basement and the possibility of
water damage concerms me, should the sump pump fail. I am trying to come
up with a backup system for this. The two scenarios to be backed up
would be:
1. Sump pump motor failure
The only way I can think of to backup the sump pump motor is to have
another sump pump. I don't know if this is at all practical, but
another pump *could* be installed higher in the sump, with the float at
a higher level, so that it would only kick on if the other failed and
the water level got higher than the primary float. There may not be
enough room in the sump for all of the pipes required, but this may be
solvable.
2. Power failure
The power problem could be solved with a battery backup arrangement
maybe using a car battery.
The point is, I KNOW that the sump pump or power failue is going to
occur when I am away on vacation for 10 days and I will come back to a
disaster. Are there any packaged system for this or these
eventualities.
Dave Kinney
|
150.305 | | STAR::DZIEDZIC | | Mon Jun 01 1992 14:54 | 10 |
| You can purchase a battery-backup sump pump system; the last
Sears catalog I received had them. I've seen a couple of
different types, but most seem to connect a "T" fitting to
the discharge pipe somewhere about the "middle" of the
sump's height (so the backup pump only runs when the main
pump has obviously failed). The complete system runs about
$200, excluding the required marine battery.
I've also seen these for sale at True Value hardware stores.
I believe "Simer" is the brand name on those.
|
150.306 | Eliminate the problem? | MSEE::TOWLE | Corky | Wed Jun 03 1992 16:50 | 9 |
| RE: .0
The other alternative that would probably solve all your worries would be to
trench the foundation and lay pea stone and drain pipes to move the water
away from the foundation.
May end up being more expensive to get done but considering what even a small
amount of water can do to a finished basement it would more than likely be
a wise investment in the long run.
|
150.307 | UPS is out of the question! | MISFIT::KINNEYD | Angst for the memories | Thu Jun 04 1992 19:56 | 16 |
| Thanks for the advice. Re Trenching, I think that would cost a lot and
I bet I would be hard pressed to find a contractor that would warrent
that such an operation would solve the problem. Although, I made a
quick stop at Sears to see that they have a sum pump backup system that
is complete with backup pump, clamps, tee fitting, battery charger,
and plastic case for the battery for $199.00 excluding the car battery.
Since this system will cost over $300.00 with tax, I think I will shop
around for a while.
Here's another question. I have only been in this house 6 months and I
do not know how old the sump pump is (It came with the house). Should I
replace it and keep the old one as a backup? Am I just being overly
paranoid? The only water problems I have had to deal with in houses
past were a function of gravity involving no pumps.
Dave Kinney
|
150.308 | A friend's system | GOOEY::FRIDAY | CDA: The Holodeck of the future | Fri Jun 05 1992 14:43 | 23 |
| Friends of ours also had problems with a wet basement.
What they finally did was purchase a generator to wire
up to the house in case of a power failure. They made
switchover to the generator sufficiently simple that
they could reasonably expect a house-sitter to do it
if they were on vacation.
In addition, they added a second sump pump as a backup,
this after the other one had a simple mechanical failure
that led to a foot of water in their basement while they
were away.
Personally, I'd avoid batteries. They have to be replaced
eventually, and in the event of a really long power outage
they could run out of juice when you needed them most.
If you see the threat of a flood as being really serious,
spending a few hundred dollars on a backup system will probably
save you many times that amount, at least in peace of mind,
if not in property damage as well.
|
150.309 | | STAR::DZIEDZIC | | Fri Jun 05 1992 14:52 | 11 |
| Re .4:
Remember the probability of having someone around to "switch
over" to a generator decreases in inverse proportion to the
amount of rain you've had. In other words, the one time you
get water in the basement will be the time you're on vacation.
The battery backup option gets around this, but does suffer
from the limited life of the battery.
The best of all worlds would be a battery-backup system PLUS
a generator.
|
150.80 | | QUILLA::STINSON | "Linda Saisi Stinson...DTN 296-5796" | Fri Jun 05 1992 17:41 | 8 |
| I didn't really get any feedback on my question, so I will restate it.
If you have a water problem and don't have anywhere to pump the excess
water to (the yard is small, into the street is illegal, into the neighbor's
yard isn't nice), and you have to live with the water problem, will it
weaken the foundation over time or is it more a question of damaging your
belongings? Is there a way to waterproof the basement so the water doesn't
come in even if the water table is high?
Linda
|
150.81 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome PKO3-1/D30 | Fri Jun 05 1992 18:07 | 30 |
| I'll make a guess...
If you don't have any place to put the excess water, I expect you
have to live with it. I don't believe there would be any way to
reliably waterproof a basement if you truly have a water table higher than
the basement floor. There are bound to be cracks, and if the water
table is higher than the basement floor, the water is going to be under
pressure trying to get in.
Will it weaken the foundation over time? "It all depends." A friend
of mine looked at a house in Worcester a few years ago that he was
thinking of buying. (He didn't!) He called it "the muck house."
When it rained, a river ran under the basement floor and turned the
clay there to bottomless muck. The floor was undermined to the point
that there was a foot or two drop from the underside of the concrete to
the dirt (muck) below. (There was a hole in the concrete where he
could look down and see all this.)
Most places won't be as bad as that. If the dirt under the foundation
is basically solid, water can come and go all it wants and it won't
really hurt anything. If the dirt is clay-ish or anything that can
turn to muck and shift when it gets wet, if the water wants to run
from point A to point B under the foundation contributing to washout,
then you may have a problem.
In "most" houses, my guess is that the only thing water in the basement
will do is get whatever is there wet. But it *could* make the floor
and/or foundation collapse if you happen to be extremely unlucky. A
structural engineer with some knowledge of the soil in the area might
be able to give you an informed opinion about the risks in any given house.
|
150.82 | | KOALA::DIAMOND | No brag, Just fact. | Fri Jun 05 1992 19:26 | 6 |
|
There are companies that sell waterproofing systems with a 30 year
warrenty. I have no personal experience if they work or not. But at
least they have the warrenty if they don't.
Mike
|
150.310 | Pay me now or pay me later | MISFIT::KINNEYD | Angst for the memories | Fri Jun 05 1992 19:45 | 14 |
| I got a VAXmail msg from someone with such a set up (backup pump) and
he says the battery will last about 8 hours. I don't know if that is of
operation or not. The sears unit comes with a battery charger that
stays hooked up and when the charge is low (enough) it kicks in to keep
the battery continiously charged. Trouble with this is that there is an
in line buss fuse to this arrangement so the battery could be low due
to a $.25 fuse burnout.
This arrangement is enough backup power for most power outages. The
absolute only way to assure coverage for longer is with a generator
*AND* to be there personally. I think I will shop around for a backup
system and install it. $300 now may save me several $k later.
Dave Kinney.
|
150.83 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Jun 05 1992 20:31 | 4 |
| re .82:
They won't warrantee their work for all houses. I know someone whose house
they won't warrantee.
|
150.84 | Things that might improve your situation... | JUNCO::CASSIDY | Aspiring conservationist | Mon Jun 08 1992 04:56 | 20 |
|
I believe water seeping through concrete leaches the lime out
of it. If you look at your cellar walls, you will probably see
a white powder type build up. I don't know how bad this is for
your foundation but I'm sure it's not good. Lime is critical to
good concrete.
There is little you can do to lower your water table but there
are ways to reduce the amount of rainfall that is allowed to reach
your foundation. These include building up banks around your house
to allow the water to run away from it. You should also have a
full gutter system that drains as far away from the house as pos-
sible. Even better if you had a gutter system that drained into
rain barrels.
You can use the water in these barrels to water your lawn or
garden. A small squirt of detergent every once in a while would
break the waters surface tension and prevent mosquitoes from
using the barrels as a breeding ground.
Tim
|
150.85 | use the sink ! | CSDNET::DICASTRO | jet ski jockey | Fri Aug 14 1992 19:11 | 10 |
|
why not pump the water into the wash basin (sink) you use for laundry,
or into the plumbing which exit most houses through the cellar.
Most trench, pea stone, sump solution co's, give transferable
warranties for the life of the structure. Leaset the 3 Iolicited did.
cheers,bob
|
150.142 | Rating waterproofing products | RENFRO::POWELL | Reed B Powell 422-7291 PTO Sales Support | Mon Aug 17 1992 20:26 | 27 |
| There were a number of discussions a couple ofyears back, but none in
recent times, on waterproofing basements, and the various products
available. A couple were mentioned as being new, but no one had any
experience with them at the time. I'm getting ready to finish off my
basement, and have a wall (cement block) that is a little moist. I've
finished basements before, but never had to worry about actual moisture
that already existed (ie, I only worried about preventing any future
problems).
Any experiences with some of the following that were mentioned in those
old notes?
BENTONITE: This sounded like the miracle drug of waterproofing, It was
some sort of volcanic ash that you pumped into the ground outside the
foundation. Have never seen it anywhere - did this product ever take
off - anyone used it? (note 178.* in case you think I made this up)
DRYLOK - pretty readily available
DRY WALL PAINT
THOMPSON'S water seal (for floors)
DAMTITE - used to see it in the stores in Mass, have not seen it here
in Penna - is it still made?
|
150.143 | Some experience with damp proofing | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Tue Aug 18 1992 14:54 | 24 |
| I had a guy out to give me a quote on using bentonite. He was going to
pump it into the ground next to the foundation -- cheaper than excavating.
If I recall correctly, bentonite is a kind of clay that can expand up to
20x (?) when it gets wet. So there can be big cracks in the foundation
and lots of movement, and the stuff keeps working.
From everything I've read, any kind of water seal or paint that is applied
on the inside of the foundation is just a damp proofing, not a real water
proofing. That is, it can keep out water that seeps through because the
soil is wet, but cannot keep out water that is pushed by hydrostatic
pressure -- e.g. if the groundwater level rises. Even the black coatings,
I've been told, don't really waterproof, since they aren't flexible
enough to avoid breaking if the foundation cracks.
That said, I had a coating rolled on to my garage foundation, which is
15' below ground level at the back (it's set into a hillside). There's
been no water problems, except for some condensation soaking into the
concrete on hot muggy summer days, and rain soaking up the outside, which
I didn't like because I figured it's getting into the siding. hompson's
water seal took care of both those problems. The foundation is well
drained, so I don't expect any problems with hydrostatic pressure.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
150.144 | | KOALA::DIAMOND | No brag, Just fact. | Tue Aug 18 1992 15:40 | 10 |
|
About 1 months ago we had a crack in our foundation fixed with
bentonite. On heavy rains it would leak pretty bad. I'd say about 4 or
5 gallons a day. The bentonite was the only solution in my opinion. The
cose was $500. They sprayed the bentonite 6' to the left and 6' to the
right of where the water was comming in. It comes with a life-time
warrenty. It hasn't leaked yet, even with the heavy rains we've had in
the past 4 days.
Mike
|
150.145 | Bentonite is a dirty word in CO | SSDEVO::JACKSON | Jim Jackson | Tue Aug 18 1992 18:14 | 13 |
| Re: bentonite
Fascinating. Here in Colorado Springs, certain areas have a very high
bentonite concentration in the soil. The result is large soil expansion
when it rains, resulting in serious foundation damage.
I looked at a home in one of these areas a few months ago that had had $20K
in retrofit work done to the foundation, and the home inspector *still* said
that the basement must be left unfinished so that buttress walls could be
added later when the soil moved again. This house already had steel beams
sunk 30 feet below the basement, trying to hold things together.
One person's solution is another person's nightmare, I guess.
|
150.146 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Aug 18 1992 18:29 | 6 |
150.147 | It's everywhere | SSDEVO::JACKSON | Jim Jackson | Tue Aug 18 1992 23:07 | 13 |
| Re: .13
My understanding is that the problem is that there is too high a bentonite
concentration in the soil, and the forces resulting from the changes in
water content are too much for a typical foundation to handle. The basement
is "crushed" by the expanding bentonite.
It is possible to engineer a foundation that can withstand the forces; some
"tract" builders here failed to do so, and the entire neighborhood suffers a
bad reputation as a result.
I have seen the damage caused by this; it's amazing how much you can move a
foundation and still have the house standing.
|
150.148 | paints/sealers really work? | SMAUG::FLOWERS | IBM Interconnect Eng. | Wed Aug 19 1992 16:59 | 16 |
| >From everything I've read, any kind of water seal or paint that is applied
>on the inside of the foundation is just a damp proofing, not a real water
>proofing. That is, it can keep out water that seeps through because the
>soil is wet, but cannot keep out water that is pushed by hydrostatic
>pressure -- e.g. if the groundwater level rises.
So do these interior paints or sealers work well? We have a pretty damp
basement (I've already sealed a couple cracks that would leak in bad rain)
and I'm concerned about the dampneess/humidity causing problems with the
oak hardwood floors on the first floor...
(A dehumidifier will be difficult to drain since the pipe to the septic tank
is ceiling high... I'd have to pump the water up...)
Thx,
Dan
|
150.149 | | FREBRD::POEGEL | Garry Poegel | Wed Aug 19 1992 17:34 | 9 |
|
>>(A dehumidifier will be difficult to drain since the pipe to the septic tank
>>is ceiling high... I'd have to pump the water up...)
When I had my central AC installed, the guy put a little pump in to pump the
water up to the septic drain. It's only about the size of a brick. Since
it came as part of the package, I don't know how much it costed.
Garry
|
150.150 | I used Drylok and I'm glad I did | AWECIM::MCMAHON | Code so clean you can eat off it! | Wed Aug 19 1992 18:21 | 17 |
| In my previous house, there was an underground spring running under my
foundation ( I found it when enlarging the sump pump hole! ).
Fortunately, the previous owner had a drain that ran from the sump pump
hole to the city drain in front of the house, so that once I cleared
that, most of the water would passively drain that way. However, since
the water table was very high in our neighborhood, we would still get a
lot of dampness/water in the basement. I etched (muriatic acid) every
wall and the floor then applied DRYLOK. It was a long and dreary job
but in the end it worked out great! The basement was nice and dry when
I was done, and it stayed that way. Not soon after I finished, we had
Hurricane Bob rip through here (Mass.) and dumped 12 inches of water
on us and the basement stayed nice and dry through the whole thing.
Based on my personal experience, I would recommend Drylok.
p.s. In my new house with central AC, I also have one of those little
pumps for the condensation and it works great! Check the hardware
stores in your area, I'm sure they'll have them.
|
150.151 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Is the electric chair UL approved? | Wed Aug 19 1992 19:57 | 11 |
| re .15:
>(A dehumidifier will be difficult to drain since the pipe to the septic tank
>is ceiling high... I'd have to pump the water up...)
You could perhaps mount it high, perhaps permanently suspend it from the
joists or something, if you can get it high enough.
The pump .16 mentions is called a condensate pump I think.
-Mike
|
150.152 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Wed Aug 19 1992 20:08 | 6 |
| RE: .15
You could also empty it each day.
Marc H.
|
150.153 | Small water leak creates big smell | MISFIT::KINNEYD | If it's the last thing we ever do | Thu Aug 20 1992 13:46 | 13 |
| After finishing my basement and installing a battery powered backup
sump pump system as a bit of insurance I still had a minor water
problem that I never anticipated. I cam home from work one day to find
that the drain hose on the furnace had clogged. This is the hose that
carries all the water from the ac coils to the sump. It actually goes
under the slab. Well, some water made it to finished area and got
under the carpet and pad. Not much I think but enough that there is now
a very musty oder in this carpeted area.
Now I don't know how to get rid of this oder without damaging the
carpet. Can anyone help?
Dave
|
150.154 | | SENIOR::HAMBURGER | Life is a Do_It_Yourself project! | Thu Aug 20 1992 17:29 | 12 |
| <<< Note 987.20 by MISFIT::KINNEYD "If it's the last thing we ever do" >>>
-< Small water leak creates big smell >-
under the carpet and pad. Not much I think but enough that there is now
a very musty oder in this carpeted area.
Dry the room/carpet dry with a dehumidifier for several days, then
apply baking soda/carpet deodorizer and let stand. That should clear out
the remaining musty oder for you. You may need to then vacuum or shampoo
the rug to get everything clean. A Rinse n" Vac type unit will do nicely.
Vic
|
150.155 | Bentonite and pressure against the foundation | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Mon Aug 24 1992 15:50 | 17 |
| re .12:
When bentonite is used for waterproofing, they just apply a fairly thin
coating, so there's room for it to expand into the surrounding soil. If
the surrounding soil is all bentonite, then there'd be a lot more force
against the foundation. Nightmare, indeed!
Actually, one reason I decided against Bentonite is because I have a
fieldstone foundation, and I'm not eager to do anything to increase the
pressure against it. It doesn't experience frost heaves because the
basement stays at about 50 deg in winter, so there is probably seldom
any frozen soil against it. I've decided I'd better apply foundation
insulation on the outside, not the inside, to avoid a potentially very
expensive problem.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
150.156 | | AIDEV::HOLLAND | | Wed Aug 26 1992 16:43 | 8 |
|
In my basement, I have drylocked the walls, but still get a
"musty" smell. I do run a de-humidifier also.
Is there anything else I can do?
|
150.157 | | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Thu Aug 27 1992 15:39 | 1 |
| Maybe there is still moisture coming up through the floor?
|
150.158 | | AIDEV::HOLLAND | | Fri Aug 28 1992 16:50 | 3 |
|
Maybe I should dry lock the floors.
|
150.86 | Sealer for leak near water pipe | ICS::GATTERMAN | Bruce Gatterman DTN 223-5110 | Sun Dec 13 1992 22:36 | 12 |
| Before this past storm, I had a pinhole leak around the point where
the town water pipe enters the basement. A combination of hydrolic
cement and GE silicone caulking allowed only a small amount of water to
enter in heavy downpours. This pinhole has now developed into
something larger. I'd prefer not trying to dig down from the outside
over 7 feet to waterproof where the pipe enters our basement. What
epoxy type compound would you recommend to apply inide around where it
is leaking. I read in previous notes about Glu Vit. Has anyone used it
recently. Thanks in advance for your recommendations.
Bruce
|
150.87 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Mon Dec 14 1992 13:10 | 7 |
| The ONLY way to stop this is to dig down, fill excess exterior hole
with hydraulic cement, then caulk pipe to wall with Butyl Rubber
caulk and then finally coat the whole area liberally with a tar
compound like roofing cement. You can fill from the inside until
the cows come home and it will always start up again.
Stuart
|
150.88 | | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-04/S23 -- dtn 381-2684 | Mon Dec 14 1992 19:03 | 33 |
| RE: .86
Basically, I agree with .87 -- it is very unlikely that more work
on the inside of the wall will be of much help. In fact, you may
have to install an entire perimeter drain system in addition to
the work that .87 suggests.
However, you may want to consider the following before you dig.
If, during heavy rain, there is standing water on the ground above
where the town water pipe enters, then you _might_ be able to
divert enough water away to reduce or eliminate the problem.
The first thing I'd check is rain gutters and down spouts. Are
they diverting water away from or into this area. They should be
changed (installed, if you don't have any) to divert water to
someplace else.
Next consider if the ground could be re-graded or if a drainage
ditch could be dug to divert water from this area. Sometimes --
not always, but *some*times -- a small amount of landscaping work
can do a lot of good. Also look for things like a driveway or walk
way that causes water to flow to this area. In this case, maybe a
small curb could be installed to divert water.
Another idea is to simply accept that you can't keep water out and
to install a small sump w/pump in the floor where the water
enters. It may be possible that this will limit the wet area to an
acceptably small portion of your basement.
After the second "flood" in 7 years -- 1/2" over 20-50% of the
floor -- I'm in the process of implementing this sump/pump
approach. It seems that the "french drain" that was supposed to
let water OUT lets water in every so often.
|
150.90 | landscaping instead of drainage? | SMAUG::FLOWERS | IBM Interconnect Eng. | Wed Mar 31 1993 16:10 | 16 |
| We're having a similar problem with bad landscaping causing major water
build-up against the foundation. Our attempts at drainage have been
minimal and hence only slightly effective. (Since I think a good drainage
system will be a lot of work for us - and I think the best solution is to
keep the water away from the foundation in the first place.)
You described the drainage system you put it... It sounds like it is open
faced (ie, you didn't lay down loam and sod back on top)? Our water problem
is all along the length of the house in back so I don't think I want to put
open drainage all along the back.
Anyway, is there a reason why filling in the low area (ie, better landscaping)
won't fix the problem? I'm hoping better landscaping and a little natural
gravity will do the trick (without an extra 'man-made' drainage system).
Dan
|
150.91 | hoses can make cheap pumps | DAVE::MITTON | Token rings happen | Wed Mar 31 1993 16:20 | 15 |
| FWIW:
I spent yesterday running around getting a pump (most stores are
sold out, suprised) and getting my basement water under control.
I have a similar problem with a lousy foundation drain, clay soil,
and lousy landscaping creating standing water in the back yard.
After getting a siphon going in the basement, I have also put my other
garden hoses to work siphoning off the standing water in the yard.
So far neither has broken siphon and are still draining.
It's cheap and works well. I'll get around to some permanent drains
this summer.
Dave.
|
150.92 | My yard looked like Mars Monday | ASDG::WATSON | Discover America | Wed Mar 31 1993 16:54 | 12 |
| I've had 4 pumps running in my backyard and against the house to keep
the water from the basement (I had a waterfall Monday down my cellar
steps). I had both an oil delivery man and the septic guy (preventative
measure) tell me they put in drains for just such problems. I live in
a low area and I've had problems but not like this. I was lucky to be
able to buy two pumps and borrow one or I would have been underwater.
The drain would be 8' off the house, 3-4' deep, filled with perf tube
and crushed stone and sodded on top. It would run 100' in back where
the water is sitting and would extend another 100' to the culvert
drain, if the town allows it. Estimated cost: $1500. Maybe more if I
can't tie in and need a large dry-well.
|
150.93 | | SMAUG::FLOWERS | IBM Interconnect Eng. | Wed Mar 31 1993 17:27 | 7 |
| > The drain would be 8' off the house, 3-4' deep, filled with perf tube
> and crushed stone and sodded on top.
'...and sodded on top'? But when the ground is frozen, the water can still
make it past the 6" of loam and sod?
Dan
|
150.94 | "INJECT" the crack ! | JUNCO::DMCFADDEN | | Mon Apr 05 1993 17:17 | 17 |
|
I tried something this weekend that I hope works !
I have a crack in one area of my basement that leaks.
I vee'd out the crack, which I found (using a coat hanger) went all
the through to the outside, used one of those small siringe (sp ?)
type tubes that are used to give baby's vitamins, mixed up some
HYDROLIC cement (real soupy), then put a small hose on the end and
fed it into the crack all the way to the outside ground and
"injected" the hole full of cement.
I think I could use this idea on big cracks and use and old
caulking tube and fill it full of HYDROLIC cement, hopefully
now I won't have to dig down from the outside (7 feet down) !
|
150.215 | wet basement 1993... | TEKVAX::KOPEC | Contains Sulfites | Wed Apr 07 1993 16:23 | 24 |
| Well, it looks like I'm gonna have to do the
cut-the-floor-and-put-in-drains deal. after the recent rains, a look in
my neighbor's back yard (which is a lottle lower than mine) shows that
the high water table is the culprit, so exterior drain tile isn't
likely to help (nowhere to drain to..)
There is already one sump w/pump at one end of the house, but that
doesn't seem to be quite enough to keep the water level below the floor
at the other end; so, I cut an emergency sump in during the 'flood' at
the other end, and now I figure I'll use both (seeing as I now have 2
pumps..)
Should I (a) cut the floor a foot or so away from the foundation wall
and remove the floor to the wall, or (b) cut a 'slot' in the floor
maybe 6" away from the wall and leave the 6" piece of the floor intact
to the wall?
I'm not really well versed in how a foundation looks below the slight
widening below the floor.. I'm a little worried that if I go doing too
much digging too close I'll end up with a *major* problem (when the
foundation collapses).. any thoughts? How deep should I dig/gravel-fill
near the foundation wall itself?
...tom
|
150.216 | | STAR::DZIEDZIC | | Wed Apr 07 1993 17:07 | 12 |
| I had New England Basement Waterproofing tackle this project at the
last house I owned. They used your method "a"; cut the floor about
10-12 inches away from the wall and remove the floor up to the wall.
Then they dug down about 8-10 inches and installed perforated pipe,
covered it with gravel, and "re-concreted" the trench. (They ran
all the pipes to a sump in one corner of the basement.)
The footing under the foundation walls is typically about twice as
wide as the walls, so you'll have sort of a "lip" inside the basement,
upon which the slab was poured (i.e., sort of like the letter L).
I don't believe they dug down below the level of the footing; it
would seem reasonable that they leave the footing on undisturbed soil.
|
150.217 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Thu Apr 08 1993 12:29 | 12 |
| Re: .36
Cut the floor around 6 inches to a foot from the edge of the
foundation. Dig down around 8 inches. Add some gravel, then drain pipe,
i.e. perforated pipe on the sides with a solid bottom. Do the perimeter
of the house. Drain both pipes into a common pit. Use a flue liner or
some type of tile pipe to keep the walls from caving in. By a real good
pump, exit the water away from the house. Make sure you break any
siphon in the outlet pipe, so that the water doesn't get draw back into
the pit when the pump shuts off.
Marc H.
|
150.95 | Water in Basement - I Surrender, Who can I call | AWECIM::WELLS | | Mon Apr 12 1993 14:30 | 19 |
| For the last 6 years I have been battling water finding its way into my basement
through cracks in the wall and floor and continously filling up a sump hole.
This year, as many of us out there are experiencing has been worst then some
years. My Sump pump has not shut off in 3 days now and the back yard is flooded
from the water being pumped out.
Anyway after trying all the recommended methods to contain the invading "tide",
I surrender to the professionals. Can anyone out there recommend a good
basement waterproofing company that would be located in the greater Nashua NH
area. Also, I would most likely need some expert on water tables, etc. to
help determine what to do as far as the excessive amount of water that is flowing
into the sump each spring time. Can anyone recommend a person, company or
engineer that would be able to advise me on this.
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks
dick
|
150.96 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Mon Apr 12 1993 14:55 | 6 |
| Re: .95
Before you surrender.....is the water you pump out, coming back in?
I drained mine away from the house, into the street.
Marc H.
|
150.97 | | AWECIM::WELLS | | Mon Apr 12 1993 15:10 | 5 |
| The water is draining from the sump pump out the back of the house a distance
of about 50 feet but the surrounding area in the yard is completely flooded now.
This may be seeping back in.
dick
|
150.98 | Try B_DRY | FSOA::BERICSON | MRO1-1/L87 DTN 297-3200 | Mon Apr 12 1993 15:24 | 4 |
| I had good luck in another house with B-Dry... lifetime guranantee 7X24
service.. pricey but sure.
Bob
|
150.99 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Mon Apr 12 1993 15:28 | 7 |
| Re: .97
Could be a big part of the problem! Try moving the water to another
spot far away from the house, or where the water will definitly
drain away.
Marc H.
|
150.100 | | AWECIM::WELLS | | Mon Apr 12 1993 15:49 | 3 |
| Thanks for all the replys. I will try your suggestions.
dick
|
150.101 | | BRAT::REDZIN::DCOX | | Mon Apr 12 1993 18:54 | 4 |
| Are you fortunate enough to be IN Nashua and on a sewer run? Discharge
is discharge.
Dave
|
150.102 | | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-04/S23 -- dtn 381-2684 | Mon Apr 12 1993 19:42 | 17 |
| > Are you fortunate enough to be IN Nashua and on a sewer run? Discharge
> is discharge.
Can't speak for Nashua, but I believe that pumping ground water
into a sanitary sewer is generally not allowed. The reason is that
it can overload sewage treatment plants. No, not your pump by
itself, but multpily it by thousands, and....
(I use the term "sanitary sewer" to indicate that it leads to a
waste treatment plant. "Storm sewer" are used for surface water
only and often are discharged without treatment.)
If the water conditions are as bad as you describe -- and I've
seen a number of areas recently where conditions are that bad! --
then it may be that there is no practical, affordable solution
that yields a dry basement. Floods happen, and if you live where
they happen you get flooded.
|
150.326 | Moisture Problem Cellar | ESKIMO::LANGLOIS | | Mon Aug 16 1993 17:47 | 22 |
|
Heres my problem,
I have just purchased a new 44' ranch in Northbridge.
I started studding off the cellar right away and have complete that and
the Electrical. I purchased some Insulation and started to do that also.
I kept the studding about 6" away from the Concrete wall so as not to
have moisture problems. My problem is that the wall that I insulated
actually dripped with moisture once I pulled the insulation off it dried
up in a day. Is there something on the market like a sealer of some sort.
Once I find something that takes care of this I will put a Plastic barrier
up between the studding and the insulation. I do know that I will need a
Dehumidifier but will this take care of behind the wall once I put sheet
rock up?
I definitely know that I don't have water problems just moisture
building up once the Insulation is there. Anyone have this type of
problem? How did you resolve it?
Thanks in advance,
Wayne
|
150.327 | It may not be as bad as you think. | GERALD::CHACE | My favorite season is getting nearer! | Mon Aug 16 1993 18:01 | 23 |
|
It is very possible that you have introduced the moisture from
outdoors. There has been very little rain lately and so the groundwater
is quite low. If you have had open windows and/or doors into your
cellar lately, I bet that's where most if not all of your moisture has
been coming from. Since the ground around here is always about 55
degrees (A few feet below the surface), it keeps the basement very
cool. Take warm and rather humid summer air and cool it more in your
basement - against the cement, and you have LOTS of condensation. It is
almost always a bad idea to open basement windows in the summer in New
England for this reason.
Try this test: Get a foot square piece of plastic and CAREFULLY tape it
to the cement wall with duct tape. Make sure that it is sealed all the
way around. Check it the next couple of days. If you get moisture under
it, the moisture is coming through the cement, if not, then the
moisture is coming from the air.
There are some excellent brush on masonry waterproofing paints
available. UGL Drylock is one of the best from what I have seen and
read. I'm pretty sure you can get it at Summerville Lumber.
Kenny
|
150.328 | Thanks.. | STRATA::LANGLOIS | | Mon Aug 16 1993 18:28 | 10 |
|
Thanks Kenny,
I will try the Plastic test you described, it sounds
like a foolproof thing. I am trying to think of anywhere in the house
that I could be letting in warm air but I cant think of any other than
my drier vent and a little space under the upstairs door.
Thanks,
Wayne
|
150.125 | how about tiles in the basement? | LEDS::MUNIZ | | Tue Sep 21 1993 21:07 | 19 |
| I am thinking of finishing off my basement but by now you must know
what the problem is (since I'm writing in the old "Water up through basement
floor" note.) when it rains hard for long periods of time, or when there is
a lot of snow melt I get some real wet spots on the floor (not a puddle but a
damp spot and not always in the same place in fact its never been in the same
place twice).
I was planning on etching ,with muriatic acid, the walls and floor
then applying DRYLOK. I'm still thinking about this but my neighbor (with the
problem) is thinking about putting down something called DUROCK (tile backer
board by color tile) and putting tiles on top of it. Some how I like the idea
of tiles in the basement but I was wondering how it would hold up (both the
tiles in the basement and the DUROCK/tiles to the dampness/water in the
basement.)
Also what is THOROSEAL?
Thanks
JR
|
150.126 | | NOVA::SWONGER | Rdb Software Quality Engineering | Wed Sep 22 1993 13:42 | 5 |
| If you haven't solved your moisture problem (and applying DRYLOCK
isn't a solution -- more like a patch) then you're just asking for
trouble by covering it up with anything, including tile.
Roy
|
150.127 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | DENVER A Long Way | Wed Sep 22 1993 14:30 | 18 |
| Nothing but nothing but nothing you put on the top surface of a basement
floor is going to keep water out if there is a water problem. If the
surface of your floor gets wet, the concrete below the surface is even wetter
because water is evaporating off the surface.
Any surface coating will not withstand the hydraulic pressure.
You must stop the water getting in from the outside by installing an
external perimeter drain if there isn't one, or fixing it if there
is one. You should ensure that the basement walls have an exterior
waterproofing. You should correct any grading problems so that water
runs away from your house, including providing land drains if surface
water runs onto your lot.
That work will fix 90% of leaky basement floors ... the remaining 10%
need more extensive work!
Stuart
|
150.128 | Been there already.. | DEMAND::LEMIEUX | | Wed Sep 22 1993 15:09 | 38 |
| re 819.7
You are exactly right...
I had this same problem and the only sure cure was to put
(in my case) an internal (like on the inside) perimeter drain.
The water table was just too high.. I spent many a time with mops,
wet vacs, just about anything that would absorb water trying to
win that battle.
Here is what I had done. I had a contractor (a mason by trade)
jack hammer the floor along the inside of the basement walls. He
then dug down thru the cement and dirt etc until he was just below
the footing. This made a trench about 1 to 1 1/2 foot wide and
however deep the footing was. He carried out using buckets all the
old cement and dirt by passing it thru a window, and carted it off.
He then brought in crushed stones, and layed several inches in the
trench. He then layed in drainage pipe. This pipe is fexible
plastic and full of holes, and more stones on top of the pipe.
The pipe ended up in a location that was conveniently situated
for a sump hole and sump pump. I had it next to elect outlet and
a window for the pump hose. He then re cemented over the trench,
He also made a small gully along side the wall while the cement
was still wet and poked holes so that if the walls became wet
then the drips would fill the gully go down the poked holes and
into this drainage pipe. When he was done you hardley knew what
had gone on the prior two days.. yes only two days work for 3
men... Let me tell you, if you are not use to this type of
physical labor do not attempt this on your own.. In my case
my basement was finished so I had to remove all the finished
walls before the contractor started and re built after he was
done, but it was worth it.. now I have a dry finished basement
with the only fear is the elect going out while the sump pump
is needed.. Any questions you have give me a call I will try
to answer.... I know the feeling of having a finished room
that all of a sudden starts to fill up with water..
Bill 229-7922
|
150.129 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Wed Sep 22 1993 15:22 | 11 |
| RE: .8
Same technique was done in the house I grew up in. The only difference
was that my father did all the work himself.
Note: Once the floor is broken through, the "trick" to removing
concrete is to dig under the floor and then hit the unsupported
concrete floor with an 8 pound sledge. The floor chips easily.
Not as bad as you would think.
Marc H.
|
150.130 | gutters | SLOAN::HOM | | Thu Sep 23 1993 14:31 | 5 |
| My house has gutters. The gutter drains goes into pipes which
lead the water to the back of the house (the backyard is at
a lower elevation then the front).
Gim
|
150.131 | Maybe I should just change the river | LEDS::MUNIZ | | Thu Sep 23 1993 20:52 | 26 |
|
First I'ed like to thank you all for responding.
This is great stuff. Not what I want to hear but it started me
thinking. Somehow spending 5-6K to stop a evaporation problem seen like over
kill (but I'm new at this). I would like to avoid digging the basement floor
or even putting in a sump pump (if I can). I think I got a good start since
the exterior walls do have waterproofing on them and I do have gutters. These
gutter also drain into the ground. According to some of my neighbors the p.o.
had a drainage system put in that takes the water (from the gutters) to the
back of the house (my backyard also is at a lower elevation then the front).
I do have a river that likes to cut through my lot during heavy rains or a lot
of snow melt. In fact this spring I had a wet spot. My neighbor diverted the
river and since then that spot had dry up (took a few days) and the basement
has been dry since. Then again we haven't had much for rain this summer. I
think I'll wait on finishing off my basement and see how diverting this river
effects it next spring. Anyway I'ed like to install a wood stove in the
basement this fall and was wondering how it would effect my problem (ex. water
want to evaporate off the floor. The stove speedup the evaporation process
which draws more water up and so on).
If the water problem is taken care of what's the general consensus
about putting tiles in the basement (wear and tear,good bad ect.)
Thanks
JR (who's in need of that guy who can change the course of mighty rivers)
|
150.132 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | DENVER A Long Way | Fri Sep 24 1993 14:18 | 7 |
| What about you providing land drainage to divert water on your land ? Then
you will definitely have a dry basement.
Once your floor is definitely dry, then you could put nearly anything on your
floor.
|
150.343 | Redoing the Wet Room | PHAROS::ELLIOTT | | Sun Mar 06 1994 19:21 | 24 |
|
I've talked about a room in my basement in here before...it was the
garage underneath the house and then they built a detached garage and
finished the whole basement. I've been plagued with moisture in this
room and have dehumidified etc etc etc. Still, the mold marches
onward. Part of the problem is that regular pile carpeting with
padding was used on the flooring and the other is that the house is
built into a hill and is half underground. The mold creeps up the wall
and the room smells mildewy all the time.
Well, time to redo things. I want to do this room over completely and
use materials that will help the situation, not make it worse. I'd
like recommendations for the floors, the walls, the ceiling and
anything anyone can think of to make this room livable. I'd like to
make it into an office and not have all the books rot off the shelves.
I'd like to install a fan or dehumidifier or something to maintain the
environment once I get it all set. Any recommendations on that?
I'd also like to know if this can be done in stages or, because of the
moisture problem, if its best to do all at once.
Any suggestions/all suggestions are welcome.
Thanks
Susan
|
150.344 | 1111.* | STRATA::CASSIDY | | Mon Mar 07 1994 02:23 | 5 |
| You'll need to waterproof your basement. There are many notes
pertaining to this already. Typing DIR 1111.* will point you to
them. Try BASEMENTS - WATERPROOFING.
Tim
|
150.311 | Puddle-sucker water pump behaviour | SPEZKO::FRASER | Mobius Loop; see other side | Tue Mar 22 1994 22:59 | 37 |
| Well (hah!), I've just plodded through every note with titles
referring to pumps, basements and similar. The water table has
arisen!
Note from ASKENET, cross-posted (and, Mods, if it ain't in the
right topic, bear in mind that I've spent the last few hours
baling water, with the prospect of pump supervision continuing
through the night. Diplomacy will avert retaliation! :*)
================================================================================
Note 370.0 A question of water pumps and indoor basement pools No replies
SPEZKO::FRASER "Mobius Loop; see other side" 24 lines 22-MAR-1994 19:16
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Once again, I have a basement with the potential to become a
swimming pool, complete with underwater lighting a floating
sawdust! (Tonight will be an all-nighter, monitoring the level
and switching between the two puddle-sucker pumps to keep the
level down enough that the aforementioned swimming pool
possibility does not become a reality!)
However, I digress. I bought two identical 1/3hp (or so)
puddle-sucker pumps, self-priming with air vents and ran them
both together to reduce the depth to wadeable. As the level
dropped, i noticed that one pump is ejecting water from the air
vent and the other isn't. The output from each pump looks to
be of similar volume, in spite of the fact that one has a
fairly high pressure "vent" of water from the labelled air vent
(the label states that 'water leakage is normal' from the
vent.) The other pump in the same depth of water is producing
NO water from the air vent but the output volumes of water from
the drain hoses looks to be the same. Confusing.
Bottom line, which pump is behaving "normally" and which should
be exchanged?
Andy
|
150.312 | | FURFCE::BUSKY | | Wed Mar 23 1994 10:47 | 12 |
| > swimming pool, complete with underwater lighting a floating
> sawdust! (Tonight will be an all-nighter, monitoring the level
> vent.) The other pump in the same depth of water is producing
> NO water from the air vent but the output volumes of water from
> Bottom line, which pump is behaving "normally" and which should
> be exchanged?
Check the pumps for debris that maybe clogging the air vents.
Sawdust maybe??? :-)
|
150.313 | | SPEZKO::FRASER | Mobius Loop; see other side | Wed Mar 23 1994 11:55 | 8 |
| Good suggestion, but I've been doing that regularly, so that's
not it. (Actually, I'm pretty good about sawdust collection,
so there isn't much to clog the pumps.) The different 'flows'
happened straight out of the box, with the pumps about three
feet apart in the same depth of water. Oh well...
Andy
|
150.314 | Case close; problem solved. | SPEZKO::FRASER | Mobius Loop; see other side | Wed Mar 23 1994 14:49 | 14 |
|
I'll close this one anyway since I found the answer myself. I
decided to leave the venting pump running and stripped the
non-venting one. When it was assembled, the gasket material
had spread just enough to block the air bleed vent _inside_ the
housing, so it looked open from the outside. A small poke with
a bradawl to open the vent, reassemble with nothing left over
and now they're both working well, and both venting air and
water in harmony!
Thanks
Andy
|
150.329 | Is it water??? | KUZZY::EMF_LOAD | | Mon May 16 1994 16:57 | 14 |
|
I'm considering the purchase of a 25 year old home in MA.
While checking the basement, I noticed a white line along
the wall, approx. 1" above the concrete floor. 1/2 the
basement is finished and I didn't notice any damage to the
paneling of exposed studding.
Is the white line a guaranteed sign that water was once in
the basement or could the marking be caused by something
else?
Thanks,
Ken
|
150.330 | | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Mon May 16 1994 17:29 | 7 |
| It's most likely efflourescence (sp?) caused by soluble salts leeching out
of the surface of the concrete. It's a "water-related" condition, but not
an indication that there's "a water problem". Moisture may have gotten into
the concrete at one time leeching the salts to the surface where they left
the line.
-Jack
|
150.112 | water in basement via cellar door | SUBPAC::ELANE | | Mon Jul 11 1994 19:39 | 15 |
| Last friday during the heavy rain storm my cellar recieved about 20
gallons of water via the cellar door. The land surrounding the cellar
door has over the last couple of years been worn down to the point
that the lowest point in the area is now right in front of the door.
I'm trying to decide whether to regrade the land around the cellar door
to allow water to drain of toward the rest of the back yard or dig down
in front of the door and install a drywell and drain pipes and them re
grade the yard.
Any help would be appreciated. Any recommendations on a good
excavation/drainage contractor in the Grafton area would be appreciated
also.
Thanks in advance........Ed
|
150.113 | H2O +$ =fix | ELWOOD::DYMON | | Tue Jul 12 1994 12:01 | 8 |
|
A quick and easy fix would be to dig a trench from
the door out. Then place some pipe and stone in
and send it away from the house.....
Best fix would be to redirect where the water is coming from....
jd
|
150.103 | Driveway repair | USCTR1::LAJEUNESSE | | Mon Aug 22 1994 16:44 | 22 |
| Ok,
I have looked for a while and I guess this is the best place for this
question. I have a friend of mine who's mom's driveway needs a little
repair. I pointed it out to her and she asked me to fix it soooo I
figured I would come to the experts.
The problem is that top of the drive has pulled away from the house
foundation or maybe the house has pulled away from the drive. Anyway,
I told her that water and ice were going to play havoc with it and she
should get that opening (about an inch) sealed up. I thought about it
and thought that a little concrete would do it but then thought maybe
there was something else I should use.
Are there any suggestions out there?
Thanks,
Mark
|
150.104 | patch compound. | SMURF::WALTERS | | Mon Aug 22 1994 18:21 | 4 |
|
I had the same problem and filled the gap with latex-ite patch, which
you apply with a trowel. It's on sale at Home depot for $5 a tub right
now.
|
150.320 | Air Shredder FAQ | NOVA::FISHER | now |a|n|a|l|o|g| | Tue Jun 27 1995 15:46 | 18 |
| Since I will cease to be a guest on the enet this coming weekend and
will no longer be able to participate in HOMEWORK, 'writing' 'replies'
and otherwise supplying fodder for what may be the longest running gag
in the history of notes, I thought I'd provide and Air Shredder FAQ,
FYE of course.
I tried to provide attribution for many of the claims in the FAQ
and I hope you find your favorite rathole in there. I'm sure I missed
some of the potential commentary and I'm sure some of the more prose
oriented noters can improve upon this in the future.
My comments are preceded by "#" and AS is, of course, Air Shredder.
enjoy,
ed
PS: I should be able to be contacted at efisher@us.oracle.com in the
near future.
|
150.321 | FAQ | NOVA::FISHER | now |a|n|a|l|o|g| | Tue Jun 27 1995 15:47 | 417 |
| FAQ, AIR SHREDDERS:
Q: WTH is an AS good for?
#Everything! For example:
================================================================================
Note 1906.33 What Keeps Rain out of a Chimney and Fireplace Dry? 33 of 64
PSTJTT::TABER "Transfixed in Reality's headlights" 11 lines 29-JAN-1988 14:05
-< Don't throw out that old air... >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You can restore the performance of your old, heavy air with an air
shredder. I find the ten horse power model does a good job. It will
chop the air up into small bits and fluff them out to make them nice and
springy again. Sears sells an air shredder, but it's black. I like the
Honda better because it's more expensive. Don't run it in the house,
though, cause all that expanded air can turn over house plants and
thing. And be sure to wear a respirator and goggles to protect you from
the air fumes. (Mass will only allow air to be chopped by licensed air
shredder operators.)
>>>==>PStJTT
#To reduce the noise from an exhaust fan. [2547.1]
#You can use your AS to make a shed wind-proof. [2213.6] Presumably you
would use a solar powered or windmill driven AS.
#To help eliminate false alarms from a smoke detector. [2497.43] This is
probably why Massachusetts regulates AS installations.
#To clear drains clogged by heavy air. [2519.27]
================================================================================
Note 2547.2 Loud Exhaust Fan 2 of 3
PSTJTT::TABER "The project killer" 14 lines 12-AUG-1988 13:54
-< Too dangerous >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> I wonder if one of those "air shredders" that was discussed
> in a previous note would help? They should be standard equip-
> ment on devices such as this. ;-)
While shredded air will pass though a fan more quietly due to the
smaller granularity, it's dangerous to keep shredded air near a stove.
The small, loosely packed air grains will flash, much like grain dust,
causing an explosive burn. If the air is too thick near the stove, you
should use an air chipper to break up the air, but leave it in "chunks"
that are less likely to ignite. All but the cheapest hoods have
built-in chippers, and the noise you hear is probably the chunks
rattling up the exhaust pipe.
>>>==>PStJTT
#THe jury is apparently out as to whether an AS can be used in the
chimney for a wood stove:
================================================================================
Note 2746.21 smokey fireplace 21 of 27
HPSTEK::RITCHIE "Elaine Kokernak Ritchie" 5 lines 16-JAN-1991 14:07
-< (can't resist) >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Or, since cold air is heavier than hot air, you can also use an air
shredder.
:-)
================================================================================
Note 2746.23 smokey fireplace 23 of 27
QUARK::LIONEL "Free advice is worth every cent" 3 lines 16-JAN-1991 15:31
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Re: .21
Damn - she beat me to it!
================================================================================
Note 2746.24 smokey fireplace 24 of 27
ESCROW::KILGORE "Wild Bill" 4 lines 16-JAN-1991 16:25
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The air shredder has only been proven to work on rain-compacted air.
Your results on cold-condensed air may vary.
#To prevent gusts of intake air from blowing out a furnace pilot. [2809.13]
#With a properly fitted pool adaptor, it can be used to clean a swimming
pool. [3262.9] However, Paul Weiss adds:
================================================================================
Note 3262.17 Swimming pools and vacuums 17 of 32
BEING::WEISS "Trade freedom for security-lose both" 18 lines 25-MAY-1989 10:42
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You people using air shredders to dice your pool debris are just asking for
trouble. These things are designed to shred air (albiet heavy air), not
assorted leaves, sticks, toads, and bloated woodchuck corpses. You'll probably
wreck a perfectly good shredder. Even if it survives, you'll probably damage
the blades, and when you put it back in your chimney it will no longer shred
the air completely, and will probably fling large chucks of heavy air around
your basement, creating quite a hazard. If the insurance company ever finds
out that you used the shredder to dice pool debris, they'll never pay up when
the heavy air chunks give someone a consussion.
Personally I find that it's best if I use the rototiller first. You need a
special snorkel hose on the carburator to let it run on the bottom of the
pool, but at least there's no danger of electrocution. I find that it chops up
all the large debris pretty well. If you want it real fine then just put one
of those mulching attachments on your lawnmower and take that for a spin around
the pool. Don't forget the snorkel hose.
Paul
#Chimneys:
================================================================================
Note 3543.48 chimney cleaning questions 48 of 60
WFOV11::KOEHLER "Personal_Name" 12 lines 9-OCT-1992 12:47
-< Now newcomers are gonna ask about the "air Shreader" >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Colin, re "Air shreader"
Darn, I though you were going to give away my secret...I hooked up the
air shreader to my wood stove and it created the best forced exhaust draft
ever. I could get the stove pipe glowing hot in about two minutes...
<rathole fodder deleted by ed>
Jim
#Keeps the rain from compacting the air in your chimney. [4447.8]
However it does not prevent some rainwater from entering the chimney.
[4447.9]
#There is at least some resistance to installing an air shredder, though no
reason was given. [4447.16]
#Jacking up trees:
================================================================================
Note 4659.8 Grading around oak trees? 8 of 10
GOOEY::FRIDAY "Don't wait for the holodeck" 11 lines 27-AUG-1992 14:29
-< Another use for an air shredder >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Re .7
>>>Sorry, I don't have a tree jack, and my rental place has discontinued
>>>them.
No problem. Just mount your air shredder on the top of the tree, after
you make the rotor free from the motor. The updraft through the leaves
will cause the air shredder to generate lift, thereby providing a
steady upwards movement, allowing you to add more soil around the tree as
the tree is lifted. (Note that you have to be careful so that you don't
get the shredder upside down, in which case you'd have to remove soil
from around the tree...)
#Making conduit safer to own:
================================================================================
Note 4158.35 What type of wire inside conduit? 35 of 38
FREDW::SYSTEM "half a bubble off plumb" 6 lines 2-APR-1991 10:21
-< Oh NO!! - not the air shredder!! >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I kneeeeew someone would mention an air shredder. Frankly, I'm
suprised that it's not a code requirement that the air in the conduit
has to be shredded in order to pass inspection.
How does the inspector do that without it all leaking out ??
#Improve the performance of your dish washer:
================================================================================
Note 5220.36 Energy saving dishwashing? 36 of 45
LEZAH::WELLCOME "Steve Wellcome MRO1-1/KL31 Pole HJ3" 3 lines 16-MAR-1994 08:21
-< Yet another application of the air shredder! >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
What you need to do is build an air shredder into the dishwasher's
drying cycle fan; that will make the air more absorbent and better
able to dry the dishes.
#In fact, Air Shredder is often the last word needed when a problem is
discussed. [5476.12]
Q: Are there applications where an AS is inappropriate?
#Well, yes, if you have smelly air:
================================================================================
Note 4486.17 Whew! What's that smell?? 17 of 22
NOTIME::SACKS "Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085" 5 lines 22-JAN-1992 13:29
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nonsense. When you shred smelly air, the finer particles cause it to smell
worse. If you chop an onion into itty-bitty pieces, you cry more than if
you just quarter it -- it's the same principle. Of course, real men don't cry
when they chop onions. Actually, real men don't chop onions -- they leave
it to the little woman while they do manly DIY stuff.
#ANd always, remove the AS from the chimney on Christmas Eve. [5484.*]
Q: Where can I find an AS?
#Examination of the for sale note reveals that AS are not sold 'used' which
indicates that they are among the most versatile of household commodities.
Well, actually they are sold usedd but not in so dignified a place as HW.
================================================================================
Note 2519.29 How to get past trap to clear tub clog? 29 of 34
NEXUS::GORTMAKER "Whatsa Gort?" 7 lines 20-OCT-1988 04:03
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Not that it matters but the magnet stays in the 1st or 2nd stomach.
BTW- Cows use air shredders as a ventilation aid to prevent methane
concentrations from building up which is the reason why you dont see
many exploding cows.
-j
================================================================================
Note 2519.30 How to get past trap to clear tub clog? 30 of 34
21532::CURTIS "Dick "Aristotle" Curtis" 4 lines 22-OCT-1988 16:59
-< For smaller applications, I'd assume... >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
But can you find used air shredders at the slaughterhouse (as you
can used cow magnets)?
Dick
================================================================================
Note 2519.31 How to get past trap to clear tub clog? 31 of 34
NEXUS::GORTMAKER "Whatsa Gort?" 8 lines 24-OCT-1988 05:07
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
re.30
Sadly no they are quickly snapped up by the attendants and sold
on the blackmarket to 3rd world countrys that lack the technology
to develop shredders equal to ours. Inside connections refuse to
disclose how the used shredders are transported out of the country
but spectulations of covered-up government involvement abound.
-j
================================================================================
Note 2519.32 How to get past trap to clear tub clog? 32 of 34
CSSE32::NICHOLS "HERB" 11 lines 24-OCT-1988 09:21
-< But we answer to a higher authority :-) >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Furthermore, the air shredders would not pass the Federal EPA & Osha
standards for sale in USA. It has become common practice to sell to the
3rd world, products that cannot be sold domestically.
p.s.
the shredders have not been approved for use in the abatoirs by
the Rabbinical Council of America either, but that's another story.
herb
#AS are found at Spags and many hardware stores.
#AS have been sold in many store departments, near snow blowers, plUmbing
departments (Spags), near the outdoor furniture, perhaps even near the
water chippers or fish 'n' tackle, sometimes near the board stetchers and
left handed nails. Some air shredders look somewhat like garbage
disposals.
#It does appear that SPags is always moving them around:
================================================================================
Note 4158.31 What type of wire inside conduit? 31 of 38
ULTNIX::taber "Bitingly cold. Extra Dry. Straight up" 2 lines 28-MAR-1991 12:51
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wadda mean they don't carry them anymore? They're right next to the
conduit stretchers, by the flight line over by the left-hand ground straps...
#AS fit into all decors since there is never a discussion of colors or
styles of AS though Sears does sell a black one.
#Quality AS can be found in "the better contractor's supply houses, the kind
of place that would carry a whole-house turntable. [2536.9]
Q: Why would anyone want shredded air.
#At least some shredded air is electrically non-conductive and can be used
the protect your house against lightning. [3185.15]
Q: Must I have an AS to have SA?
You can find shredded air in the diet breakfast cereal section of
your local supermarket if you don't want to rent an air shredder.
[3185.16]
Q: Can I make my own AS?
================================================================================
Note 1906.39 What Keeps Rain out of a Chimney and Fireplace Dry? 39 of 64
CRAIG::YANKES 19 lines 1-FEB-1988 11:36
-< Shredded air -- alternative to PSNH? >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Re: .37
You could probably make a small room-sized air shredder out
of your popcorn maker. Its definitely won't have "one pass" chopping
power, so don't forget to revent some of the air from the outlet
back into the intake side. I'd suggest using an old fan in an enclosed
box -- much better chopping power.
If you do use the popcorn maker, be sure to disconnect the heat
source. As you shread the air, don't forget that the resulting
particles' surface area to volume ratio will go way up. Just like
how quickly sawdust catches fire ("explodes"), you could end up
heating the shredded air too much and have a flashover. Not a pretty
sight. (If you're real clever, though, I bet you could direct the
heavily-shredded air into a suitably modified engine and power a
generator for your house!)
Q: Are AS safe to use?
================================================================================
Note 1906.34 What Keeps Rain out of a Chimney and Fireplace Dry? 34 of 64
CRAIG::YANKES 17 lines 29-JAN-1988 14:45
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Be very careful with those air shredders! Consumer Reports
ran an article on them and showed that operating over-powered air
shredders for extended periods of time can start to reshread the
fluffy air into the even smaller Diced air molecules. These get
into everything and are a real pain to clean out. Besides accumulating
inside of your insulation and completely destroying the insulating
value of the material, if you are personally exposed to it for too
long, you might get the Reshredded Air Delayed Onset Narcosis. (If
you're operating an air shredder, you better add an air-exchanger to
keep this from occuring.) Minimally, you should have 3 R.A.D.O.N.
detectors near you at all times.
You see, Massachusetts *did* have a good reason for requiring
licensed air shredder operators!
Q: Are AS regulated?
#In Massachusetts.
Q: Well, I live in Massachusetts. Where can I find a licensed ASOp?
>>>==>PStJTT Certified Air Shreddererererer.
Q: How do AS work"
#Kinda like gravity deflectors but different. [4856.2]
Q: Is security a problem?
#Some industrial models are valuable. One could make an AS safe out
of a no-longer-needed oil tank and use that to conceal a valuable AS.
Q: What tools similar to an AS are there?
#Water chippers solve similar problems in the more viscous water flow
environment.
#Your author has patented an Air Chipper for use under severe atmospheric
conditions, such as is found in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Denver, New
Jersey, and Eastern Europe. These devices often use an AS as a second
stage device.
Q: Does it cost a lot to use an AS?
#Well, it does use electricity [2174.28].
Q: Do AS need maintenance"
#AS do get clogged by philosophical discussions of building codes [3565.84]
Which is probably why they are regulated in Massachusetts.
#**WARNING** YOU CAN VOID THE WARRANTEE ON YOUR AS:
================================================================================
Note 3795.7 DIY installation of Radon Mitigation systems 7 of 13
SEND::PARODI "John H. Parodi DTN 381-1640" 8 lines 7-JUL-1994 10:28
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Re: .5 and uranium-222
Note that this isotope is created when uranium-235/238 is run through
an air shredder. More importantly, doing so VOIDS THE SHREDDER'S
WARRANTEE!
JP
Q: Are there portable AS?
#There are some models of battery operated AS. [3565.167]
Q: Is it easy to install an AS?
#Well, [5029.32] indicates that it must be level and 16"OC, but I think he
just made that up.
Q: When were AS invented?
#[4811.10] Power AS came along way after 1832 but there were manual ones
bbefore then [4811.14]
Q: Why is it so hard to find an Air Shredder?
#Well, sometimes you have to look under Air Shreader.
Q: Are you serious?
#Well, yes. Some folks however think AS are a joke. [2938.8] [4811.16]
|
150.322 | | HELIX::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome MRO1-1/KL31 Pole HJ33 | Tue Jun 27 1995 17:06 | 2 |
| Thank you! for collecting all that priceless wisdom in one place.
You have done a Great Service for humanity.
|
150.323 | | NOVA::FISHER | now |a|n|a|l|o|g| | Tue Jun 27 1995 18:22 | 1 |
| 0:-)
|
150.324 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Jun 28 1995 01:11 | 5 |
| Thanks from me, too. If you're a member of Compuserve, check out the
HANDYMAN forum - very close in spirit to HOME_WORK, though no mention
of air shredders yet - something I should perhaps remedy.
Steve
|
150.325 | gag? | MCITS1::TEJA | | Wed Jun 28 1995 17:42 | 7 |
| re: .0
Whada ya mean GAG? I haven't been this embarassed since Sgt. Didlott sent me
to pick up a couple hundred feet of Flight_Line and 55 gal. drum of Rotor_Wash!
Thanx,
d.t.
|
150.218 | Moved from old note 5627 | TUXEDO::COZZENS | | Wed Jul 12 1995 13:20 | 43 |
| I've searched through all the topics around water and basement and have
gotten some information, however, I still need some input.
I bought my first house, last week. We are now moving in and find that
in the partially finished basement, one of the boards is loose. It looks
as if it is wet on the edges. The floor looks to be only plywood over
cement. The basement has the flooring and walls up so I guess you
would call it it finished, or partially finished. The floor has all
the tacks around the edges for wall-to-wall carpeting. We met some of
the neighbors last night who were surprised to find the carpet missing,
the asked if we took it up, so apparently there was a carpet, that must
have gotten wet.
We thought, great, let's put down some carpet. Upon closer examination,
there is water around the edges of the board right in the middle of the
floor. Neither my husband nor I are brave/daring enough to pull up the
floor to find out what is there. Does anyone have any ideas of what
type of contractor I would call to tear up the floor, find out what is
wrong, then repair it?
Taking up the floor may not be very easy because it looks as if the
plywood was put down then the walls were put in next, may be right, I
don't know, but the plywood goes under the wall boards. If I pull up
the floor am I going to ruin the walls? I will need to remove all the
tack strips around the edges of the room before doing anything.
Very loaded question but I need input. Lots going on.
The previous owner apparently did this himself, the job is not very
professional looking, it may be, but there are too many short cuts and
it was left only partially done.
By reading other notes, I'm going to bet that he did not seal the
cement floor before putting down the plywood, does this sound right?
Again, HELP. We wanted to put down the carpet so we could use the room.
Right now it is full of boxes from moving in, all now pushed to the side
of the room.
The other side of the basement, where the washer and dryer are, also
has a cement floor and does not appear to have any water stains.
Thanks,
Lisa Cozzens
|
150.219 | | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Wed Jul 12 1995 14:24 | 4 |
|
Did you have a certified home inspection done???
|
150.220 | Yes we did | TUXEDO::COZZENS | | Wed Jul 12 1995 17:01 | 6 |
| Yes we did have an inspection done. This was not found at the time of
the inspection. I don't recall seeing the water stain when he was
there.
Lisa
|
150.221 | few ideas on source of water | PASTA::DEMERS | | Wed Jul 12 1995 17:16 | 19 |
| I suspect that a nagging leak would give itself away by leaving that
nasty "cellar" musty smell. I would also hope that an inspector would
catch it.
Couple of thoughts:
- could a window have been left open and water came in?
- look up - did a pipe break?
The middle of the floor could just be the lowest point - the water
could be coming from somewhere else.
If it is a leak, you're best bet is to get on it quickly. Never
underestimate the power of water to do major damage to just about
anything - sometimes sooner, sometimes later - but eventually it'll
getcha...
/Chris
|
150.222 | | SMURF::MSCANLON | alliaskofmyselfisthatiholdtogether | Wed Jul 12 1995 19:39 | 17 |
| We are blessed with a split level in a damp area. When we first
moved in, we tore the carpet out in the finished basement area,
and washed down the floor to make sure it was clean when the
new carpet was installed. Two days later, we were in a state
of panic because the floor wasn't compleetely dry yet! It was
then we were introduced to the de-humidifier. Anything spilled,
leaked, washed down in the damp area will take forever to dry
out. We have two run two de-humidifiers' pretty much constantly
in the spring/summer/early fall to keep the dampness down. We
run one in the garage and one in the family room. Both areas
have poor air circulation. The central part of the basement,
which has more windows (and a sealed floor) stays much drier.
This seems to solve the problem. One benefit of this is that
your basement rooms run about 10-15 degrees cooler than the
rest of the house in the summer. Nice when it's hot :-)
Mary-Michael
|
150.223 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Jul 12 1995 19:41 | 5 |
| > One benefit of this is that
> your basement rooms run about 10-15 degrees cooler than the
> rest of the house in the summer. Nice when it's hot :-)
Dehumidifiers don't cool down the basement. They warm it up.
|
150.224 | | LEEL::LINDQUIST | Pluggin' prey | Wed Jul 12 1995 21:47 | 9 |
| >> <<< Note 5627.5 by NOTIME::SACKS "Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085" >>>
>>
>>> One benefit of this is that
>>> your basement rooms run about 10-15 degrees cooler than the
>>> rest of the house in the summer. Nice when it's hot :-)
>>
>>Dehumidifiers don't cool down the basement. They warm it up.
But, it's a dry heat!
|
150.225 | Do you have CAC? | MAIL1::BLACKMAN | NY/NJ NIS | Thu Jul 13 1995 02:06 | 18 |
| Hi,
I have the same problem, a humid basement. Even with CAC I still have
a musty smell in the finished part of my basement. One day I will
throw this carpet out and wash the floor. Can't see running a
DeHumidifier all the time. Now, to help, before I had the CAC
installed in my unfinished basement with concrete floors I would see
puddles when it was very humid out. Since it is so much cooler down
here, yes about 10 -15 degrees cooler, the concreate would gather water
from the air. The CAC fixed this now and I just have to get rid of
carpet.
on another note...what is the percent humidity that will lead to mold
and a musty smell? My finished basement now is about 71% humidity.
thanks
-jon
|
150.226 | light too | SMURF::WALTERS | | Thu Jul 13 1995 12:45 | 5 |
|
Don't forget darkness - if the basement only has a small window the
lack of light can encourage species of mold that tolerate lower humidity,
but don't like light. Not sure, but I think dry rot falls into this
category.
|
150.227 | | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Thu Jul 13 1995 13:20 | 8 |
|
Did the inspector ask about water in the basement? Did you ask
about water in the basement? If you or the inspector did and
were given an answer that indicated that there had been no water
then you have recourse possibly that you might want to check out.
justme....jacqui
|
150.228 | In other places ??? | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Thu Jul 13 1995 19:03 | 17 |
| re:last few
Sounds like a job for the infamous...
A I R S H R E D D E R ! ! !
Had to get at least one of those in ;-) At any rate, if it was
condensation, I'd expect to see it in places other than just the middle
of the floor. Being that this is finished, it's hard to tell.
Are there any below grade portions of the wall exposed, or that easily
could be ? If yes, and you're not seeing it there, I tend to doubt that
it's condensation. Short of ripping up a section, I don't know any other
way to find out for sure.
Ray
|
150.229 | Tub was leaking in to the cellar | TUXEDO::COZZENS | | Mon Jul 17 1995 14:10 | 11 |
| We did find that the tub was draining in to the basement and not in to
the pipes, as it was suppose to. The entire tub drain had to be
replaced. We are going to tear up the floor and see what is under
there then see if we can trace a leak back to its source. There is no
evidence of any leaking water on the unfinished side. We are also
going to try a dehumidifier as soon as we can determine the problem.
Thanks for the input. Anyone have a dehumidifier they want to sell?
:)
Lisa Cozzens
|
150.230 | May want to check washer too | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Mon Jul 17 1995 14:34 | 10 |
| re:11
Depending on the age of the house, there may be floor drains which
run to a dry well or something. If you have a septic system, they may
have done this to try to keep some of the grey water out of the leech
field (i.e. run tub drain to drywell). If they did this, then the
washer drain may also be suspect, as these are the two sources of grey
water most appropriate to send to a dry well.
Ray
|
150.231 | | SMURF::MSCANLON | alliaskofmyselfisthatiholdtogether | Mon Jul 17 1995 15:20 | 11 |
| re: .11
Check around the tub for leaks in the caulking and/or grout if
you have tile. When our tub was leaking into the basement, we
found the problem was water leaking through loose caulking, which
over time, had managed to disintigrate about half of the wallboard,
requiring the replacement of half the wall and half the tile (the
previous owner was not real motivated in the home repair and
maintenance department).
Mary-Michael
|
150.232 | | VMSSPT::PAGLIARULO | | Mon Jul 17 1995 17:00 | 5 |
| If you are going to buy a dehumidifier, do it soon. Speaking from last year's
experience, it's rapidly approaching the time where the stores will be rotating
their stock and you won't find a decently priced humidifier anywhere.
George
|
150.233 | humid and dehumid | NOTAPC::HARPER | | Wed Jul 19 1995 19:42 | 4 |
| I've heard that it's fun to get both a humidifier and dehumidifier,
put them in the room at the same time and let them fight it out.
|
150.234 | | LEEL::LINDQUIST | Pluggin' prey | Thu Jul 20 1995 14:08 | 7 |
150.234 | | CSLALL::NASEAM::READIO | A Smith & Wesson beats four aces, Tow trucks beat Chapman Locks | Thu Dec 21 1995 19:48 | 6 |
150.334 | Puddle-sucker pumps?? | ROCK::RAMEY | | Mon Jan 22 1996 00:25 | 15 |
| I'd like some more information on the puddle-sucker pumps mentioned in note
150.311. I was up Friday night, Saturday morning, until after 1am,
periodically running my shop vac to suck up the growing puddle of water
coming into my basement! This hopefully only happens during really wet
conditions, like the January thaw and rain storm we had here in
Massachusetts. So I don't want to install a real sump pump. But a puddle
sucker pump on the shelf that I could whip out as needed might be just the
thing.
Any information, like how deep the puddle needs to be, will it pump up a
few feet so I can run a garden hose to the sink, availability, cost would
be helpful!
Thanks,
Del
|
150.335 | Me 2, water 0 | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Mon Jan 22 1996 13:00 | 21 |
| Had a similar problem with my rental property. The co-owners had
water coming into the lower level (split-entry). I went around the back
of the house and found a puddle over my ankles right up against the
house.
We never had a problem with this until 3 years ago. We had some
work done and some dirt was removed to fix the back wall. The dirt was
never replaced, leaving a low spot right at the base of the house.
I made a trench and threw dirt up against the side of the house
having it slope away from the house toward the trench. The trench
carried the pooled water downhill and away from the house. Voila', no
more leaks.
Don't overlook the obvious and simple fixes. I had also disturbed
the grade in my current house, had a leak, and threw some dirt against
the foundation and sloped it away from the house. Same results, no more
water.
Ray
|
150.336 | Landscaping TBD come spring! | ROCK::RAMEY | | Mon Jan 22 1996 13:13 | 16 |
| Friday night I dug a small trench to carry the water away. And when I was
at HQ determining that they did not have any pumps that would help me out,
I bought an extension for the down spout which just dumped the water on the
ground right at that corner of the foundation. I've already solved the
same problem at another corner of this extension by diverting the water, as
you describe.
What really got me with this incident though is that this is the first time
this corner has shown any signs of a problem and it's the corner I put my
new office area in! Fortunately, I don't think there was anything really
valuable on the floor. But I would like a better line of defense against
this, in case the "landscaping changes" to be done this spring don't solve
the problem!
Thanks,
Del
|
150.352 | Leak near the flue? | TLE::CHAYA | | Mon Oct 21 1996 19:03 | 6 |
150.353 | Hot air duct work? | DUNKLE::MCDERMOTT | Chris McDermott - Software Janitorial Services | Mon Oct 21 1996 19:20 | 6 |
150.354 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | How serious is this? | Tue Oct 22 1996 11:53 | 8 |
150.355 | We used to get a little water dripping down the HW tank vent on really windy/rainy days | TLE::TALCOTT | | Tue Oct 22 1996 15:16 | 2 |
150.356 | Water in basement - know any good contractor? | LEDDEV::SOKARI | | Tue Oct 22 1996 15:50 | 12
|