Boy does that ring a bell! I stupidly volunteered to be on a building committee for a group I belong to, and our old building, old school house, had a clogged underground drain carrying rainwater from the roof to what turns out to be an unknown destination. One of my fellow building committee guys was determined to keep digging up the pipe until all the clogs could be resolved. Never mind the excavations would kill some big oak trees. Every second sentence was "my son the engineer". Son saying useful things like you need a signed stamped engineering permit to dig a hole. That we MUST get the pipe to carry this water to the city storm drain in the street. That we must have an engineered design to make a rain garden. Etc.Etc. Couldn't convince him that odds of an 60 year old drainpipe being salvageable were slim. Turns out city has no record that original pipe actually goes into the drain, and they don't especially want our storm water. I proposed we bring the pipe to daylight and run water into a grassy area that acts as a natural swale for the whole property, or leave it draining out a clean out onto the grass, which it has been doing for 10 years. I lost the battle to make a long story short. I have 7 underground drains on my farm, and a lot of experience with old stuff, but they went ahead with the engineer's notions. Dug a huge trench, found pipe full of roots, and broken where it went under driveway. Couldn't either jet it or camera it to the end. Blew through $4500. They'd be out there still digging holes but the only smart thing the board did was cap the money to be spent at 5k. We don't have a lot of money so I would rather have spent it on something else, but not my call. So now we have a pair of new cleanouts right next to the driveway where they will be hit by the guys plowing snow. Grrr.We must have worked in the same place!
That could have been a quick fix for less than $50Boy does that ring a bell! I stupidly volunteered to be on a building committee for a group I belong to, and our old building, old school house, had a clogged underground drain carrying rainwater from the roof to what turns out to be an unknown destination. One of my fellow building committee guys was determined to keep digging up the pipe until all the clogs could be resolved. Never mind the excavations would kill some big oak trees. Every second sentence was "my son the engineer". Son saying useful things like you need a signed stamped engineering permit to dig a hole. That we MUST get the pipe to carry this water to the city storm drain in the street. That we must have an engineered design to make a rain garden. Etc.Etc. Couldn't convince him that odds of an 60 year old drainpipe being salvageable were slim. Turns out city has no record that original pipe actually goes into the drain, and they don't especially want our storm water. I proposed we bring the pipe to daylight and run water into a grassy area that acts as a natural swale for the whole property, or leave it draining out a clean out onto the grass, which it has been doing for 10 years. I lost the battle to make a long story short. I have 7 underground drains on my farm, and a lot of experience with old stuff, but they went ahead with the engineer's notions. Dug a huge trench, found pipe full of roots, and broken where it went under driveway. Couldn't either jet it or camera it to the end. Blew through $4500. They'd be out there still digging holes but the only smart thing the board did was cap the money to be spent at 5k. We don't have a lot of money so I would rather have spent it on something else, but not my call. So now we have a pair of new cleanouts right next to the driveway where they will be hit by the guys plowing snow. Grrr.
Yup. A perforated lid for the cleanout would have done it. Just to keep the kids from dropping rocks down it..That could have been a quick fix for less than $50
I've always said you need to get an engineer out of the way and let someone else come up with the solutionYup. A perforated lid for the cleanout would have done it. Just to keep the kids from dropping rocks down it..