International Association of Certified Home Inspectors
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| Exterior Inspections Contains discussions about the exterior portion of a home inspection. This includes roofs, gutters, downspouts, decks, patios, windows, etc. |
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#1
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Please Note:
Erol Kartal is a non-member guest and is in no way affiliated with InterNACHI or its members.
My back yard is quite large with a slight but steady pitch towards the home. In Spring I had planned to add a french drain which would drain to the street. A contractor has since told me that because the soil is almost solid clay under 4'' of dirt, I should regrade the property and let the water drain away naturally. I'm trying to keep as much water away from my crawl perimeter drainage tile as possible.
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#2
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InterNachi Awards Portal: http://co.nachi.org/inachiawards/ ____________________________________________ "An Education, not just an Inspection" Larry Kage, CMI Lake Ann (Traverse City), Michigan 49650 231 929 3525 Professional Inspector serving the Traverse City, Michigan area and beyond.
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#3
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I agree with the contractor. It's always best to prevent the water from getting to the structure to begin with. Depending on your property and it's layout, a swale may be an option to consider.
Jeffrey R. Jonas Critical Eye Property Inspections JRJ Consultants Owatonna, Minnesota Chapter President InterNachi Awards Portal: http://co.nachi.org/inachiawards/
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#4
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Hmm. Well if it is only 4 inches of soil and then clay, that could save you some work. The water won't penetrate the clay so it would sit in the soil on top. I would go with the linear french drain but only about 6 inches into the clay, install the corrugated pipe with sock and gravel, landscape fabric and then cover with dirt and whatever you had growing there.
The clay should act as a barrier and direct the water into the pipe and away from the home. I wouldnt want to do a full grading. Too much work and you then have the clay at the surface unless you strip the topsoil, grade heavier and re-install the top soil. Otherwise nothing will grow there. I wouldnt expect a contractor possibly looking for work to come up with anything but a larger project. My 2 cents. Good luck. Stephen Stanczyk Washington State Licensed Home Inspector # 221 President, Washington Association of Property Inspectors (WAPI) (253) 241-0602 calls answered until 10pm Pierce County -Thurston County - King County - Snohomish County |
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#5
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Quote:
When some people speak of a “French drain,” they refer to a trench in which a drain pipe is laid, but the traditional French drain is basically a trench filled with gravel. I am not against what Steve mentioned, but considering that the slope is towards your foundation, the contractor might not have been off base. Considering that the lot slopes towards your foundation, you either have to build the grade up so to maintain that 6" in 10' or create a swale 10' away or more if possible. The French Drain works great when the ground is not frozen. If the slope is towards your foundation, during the Winter and early Spring, the water will still find its way to the foundation. Since the ground is never frozen near a foundation due to thermal breach of the condition spaces, water has a clear chanel to go down to perimeter drainage, and if none is installed, it could be a problem with hydrostatic pressures or leakage through the wall that is already comprimised with cracks. The sure fix is stripping the loam and swaling the property properly so you can sleep at night. LEED Green Associates InachiAwardsPortal: Inachi US Member of the Year Award 2009 |
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#6
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Please Note:
Erol Kartal is a non-member guest and is in no way affiliated with InterNACHI or its members.
Hi Marcel,
In September, I did have new drainage tile installed in the crawl along with concrete encapsulation. My goal is now to try and keep water away and not look at my sump pump as a solution. |
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#7
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Hi Erol. I hope all is well.
Marcel was right on with the freeze consideration. Regrading and a swale sounds best for your situation. InterNachi Awards Portal: http://co.nachi.org/inachiawards/ ____________________________________________ "An Education, not just an Inspection" Larry Kage, CMI Lake Ann (Traverse City), Michigan 49650 231 929 3525 Professional Inspector serving the Traverse City, Michigan area and beyond.
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#8
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Please Note:
john bubber is a non-member guest and is in no way affiliated with InterNACHI or its members.
sorry but water will PENETRATE clay,sure it will.Have seen it right up close,digging the shtt out around homes for 3 decades.It`ll penetrate clay around a house whether someone installs some type of swale or not,have seen many install all different types/depths of swales/drain tile.Some attemtped pouring concrete (a few builders own houses) along/against their basement wall/crawl-wall,they dug out 1-3' deep and 1-2'wide,poured concrete and then raised the grade atop the concrete,still leaked and THEN 'fixing' their actual problems just got MORE expensive.
(exterior cracks). Water may not penetrate clay as quickly as sand etc but it will penetrate.(expand `n contract) |
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#9
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John is correct, a swale will divert most of the run off, the clay will still obsorb the water at a slow rate.
I think the key here is to divert as much water run off away from the foundation as possible and then deal with the other problems such as water proofing and infiltration near or at the foundation. My own property is all clay also. Knock on wood, I have a complete dry basement for the past 20 years. No sump pump. I can hear the water trickling down the drain from the floor drain. I am on of the lucky ones for a late 1960's build. LEED Green Associates InachiAwardsPortal: Inachi US Member of the Year Award 2009 |
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#10
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Please Note:
john bubber is a non-member guest and is in no way affiliated with InterNACHI or its members.
Mr Errol,
We wish we could help you better,no shtt. I do not know what your problem(s?) are,sure....TRYING to divert 'some' water away may indeed help, i`m NOT saying do not try or it won`t help at all. What i`ll say again is, MOST crawl-walls have NOTHING on the outside to stop water from entering/penetrating the blocks and joints.THIS 'could be' part of your problem. It has been part or all of many others problems. Have seen MANY homeowners DIY or hire contractors to play-with-the grade, only to continue to leak.Spent money.....time....hoped and prayed and still leaked. Yeah sure,a few DID 'slow down' the amount of water that entered.Thats NOT fixing the dang problem(s). Last edited by john bubber; 1/10/10 at 4:38 PM.. |
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#11
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John,
My impression of Erol's question is that he does not have a leak entering his crawlspace. He is attempting to reduce the demand on his sump, resulting in his sump being secondary as opposed to primary control to runoff. Jeff Ref: http://www.nachi.org/forum/f16/frenc...uestion-42505/ Jeffrey R. Jonas Critical Eye Property Inspections JRJ Consultants Owatonna, Minnesota Chapter President InterNachi Awards Portal: http://co.nachi.org/inachiawards/
Last edited by jjonas; 1/10/10 at 5:00 PM.. |
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#12
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Please Note:
john bubber is a non-member guest and is in no way affiliated with InterNACHI or its members.
Check that spelling,sorry....Erol,
Mr Jeff, can`t remember all but he has posted/asked some quest`s etc before, was just trying to point out a couple of facts and my experiences was all. |
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#13
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Quote:
Jeff Jeffrey R. Jonas Critical Eye Property Inspections JRJ Consultants Owatonna, Minnesota Chapter President InterNachi Awards Portal: http://co.nachi.org/inachiawards/
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| Need a home inspection in Wyoming? Check out InterNACHI's listing of Wyoming certified home inspectors. Or, find a home inspector anywhere in the world with our inspection search engine. |
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#14
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Please Note:
Erol Kartal is a non-member guest and is in no way affiliated with InterNACHI or its members.
Quote:
Jeff, Yes that is exactly what I'm trying to accomplish. |
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#15
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Erol, is there a possibility to connect the perimeter drainage system to a positive outfall?
It appears all the exterior ground water is being introduced to your pump at the interior. LEED Green Associates InachiAwardsPortal: Inachi US Member of the Year Award 2009 |
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