11-02-11, 09:57 AM | #21 |
Apprentice EcoRenovator
Join Date: Sep 2008
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You're one ambitious man.
I've had the unfortunate pleasure of dealing with water in the basement too these last two and a half months. My exception being 75% of the basement is finished. I just finished all the drylok work in the basement, adjusted some grading around the problem wall and put the basement back together ~ 2 weeks ago after starting the adventure the end of August (new drywall, new carpet padding) to find a weak point in my system on Oct 28th... no power to the sump pump = water in the basement again. So, back up came the carpet, and I still have a LOT of spare padding from the last lay down, so, I'll put it back down again. Ordered a battery back up sump pump which is due to arrive today. If I could have easily started over in the basement (no carpet, no drywall) I would have been doing the drain tile too, but, it was cheaper, faster, and easier to NOT toss out a ton of drywall and framing, and carpet, and dig up the floor. If it's ever under an inch of water, I may, but never has the floor ALL been wet at any given time. Rehabbing a basement is not ECO Friendly Bags and bags and bags of trash. Plus as you mentioned... dehumidifiers, fans, etc running, and now that it's cold, added space heater to keep it from being COLD and damp. It'll all be back together next week though. I'm a pro at drying things out now. And soon will be a pro carpet installer. Sorry for slightly hijacking your thread.... |
11-02-11, 10:36 AM | #22 |
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Haha, no thread hijack at all. It wasn't quite as large of a project as I thought. Me, my father in law, and mother in law did it in two days approximately. It was only about 30ft of drain tile we put in, so relatilvely smal. Also, the outside access from the basement made things tons easier as we had to haul a lot of material in and out of the basement.
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05-07-12, 10:03 AM | #23 |
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I finally got my first good test of the drainage system. This past weekend was very rainy. I'm not exactly sure how much rain we got, but it was a decent amount. Friday specifically we had a torential downpour with hail. When I got home from work I went to check the basement to see how the drain tile was holding up. I had one very small puddle in one area of the basement. It was gone the next day due to the now dry basement. If this is the worst it gets I'll be quite happy.
I'll probably hang on to the dehumidifier for a while longer, but it hasn't been plugged in since we did the work. In summer that means a good 1kWh less energy usage per day! My current average (with electric water heater) is 14-15 kWh/day so thats a solid 7% electric usage reduction all summer long.
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07-26-12, 05:09 AM | #24 |
Lurking Renovator
Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: Oklahoma
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You can gather a lot of water and let it seep down and in. This is kind of a pet peeve of mine, but you will often see "experts" on DIY television shows install a drain in a window well.
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Tags |
basement, drain tile, humidity, water |
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