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interests / alt.home.repair / Re: Basement drainage

SubjectAuthor
* Basement drainagevjp2.at
`- Basement drainagetrader_4

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Basement drainage

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From: vjp2...@at.BioStrategist.dot.dot.com
Newsgroups: alt.home.repair
Subject: Basement drainage
Date: Sun, 23 Apr 2023 19:31:02 -0000 (UTC)
Organization: Samani Marions Panyaught NYC-11357-3436-287-USA
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 by: vjp2...@at.BioStrategist.dot.dot.com - Sun, 23 Apr 2023 19:31 UTC

I am thinking of putting french drains in my new home basement. Typically
it involves cutting a 12" deep by 12" wide trench around the inside of the
basement floor. This involves silicosis risk and way too much dust because of
a concrete saw, but I notice there exist some new not very expensive concrete
saws (under $250) that both pump water and suck dust. Still, I think it wise
to at least cut the trench before I move in. I also saw some indoor tubing
essentially made like HVAC duct or gutter that is essentially a gutter going
around the inside wall (even without a trench) and I wonder how the suction
would work. If that worked, why not just take one of those hoses with many
small holes used to water the lawn and just suck up water that way. Gosh, if
that worked, I wish I thought of it fifty years ago (using apump attached to
a power drill). The old fashoined trench sposta cost $50-100/linear foot of
perimeter.

--
Vasos Panagiotopoulos panix.com/~vjp2/vasos.htm
---{Nothing herein constitutes advice. Everything fully disclaimed.}---

Re: Basement drainage

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Subject: Re: Basement drainage
From: trad...@optonline.net (trader_4)
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 by: trader_4 - Mon, 24 Apr 2023 12:27 UTC

On Sunday, April 23, 2023 at 3:31:09 PM UTC-4, vjp...@at.biostrategist.dot.dot.com wrote:
> I am thinking of putting french drains in my new home basement. Typically
> it involves cutting a 12" deep by 12" wide trench around the inside of the
> basement floor. This involves silicosis risk and way too much dust because of
> a concrete saw, but I notice there exist some new not very expensive concrete
> saws (under $250) that both pump water and suck dust. Still, I think it wise
> to at least cut the trench before I move in. I also saw some indoor tubing
> essentially made like HVAC duct or gutter that is essentially a gutter going
> around the inside wall (even without a trench) and I wonder how the suction
> would work. If that worked, why not just take one of those hoses with many
> small holes used to water the lawn and just suck up water that way. Gosh, if
> that worked, I wish I thought of it fifty years ago (using apump attached to
> a power drill). The old fashoined trench sposta cost $50-100/linear foot of
> perimeter.
>
> --
> Vasos Panagiotopoulos panix.com/~vjp2/vasos.htm
> ---{Nothing herein constitutes advice. Everything fully disclaimed.}---

Why do you want to do this? Unless there is a history of water incursion onto
the basement floor, I wouldn't be creating a big project to fix problems that
don't exist. Typically that kind of drain is done at time of construction and is
only a few inches wide. If you're going to do it, renting a good concrete saw
is what I would do.


interests / alt.home.repair / Re: Basement drainage

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