Richard
Elite Member
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2000
- Messages
- 4,952
- Location
- Knoxville, TN
- Tractor
- International 1066 Full sized JCB Loader/Backhoe and a John Deere 430 to mow with
Scenario:
10 year old house with septic tank/field and buried power line. We're adding onto house and will get too near the existing tank and build OVER the existing power feed.
We need to move both, last week the power feed was rerouted.
Now comes the tank. Builder says he's going to dig to our tank, pump it, fill it with concrete so this will not be a weak spot underground where my extended foundation might force it to settle...
He's going to dig a hole on the same plane as it some feet away, put another tank down there and then feed from house to new tank back to existing field.
I'm on a slight hill with house on the uphill side so the ONLY way they can get to the tank to dig it up, dig new hole and dig trenches to the existing drainfield is to take what ever equipment they use, OVER my existing drain field.
I told my contractor WAY before we signed anything, unequivically that when this time comes, in NO way do I want any heavy equipment driving ON TOP of my drain field.
(truth be told...I think they can squeeze a hoe to the side of it for most of this work)
I told him that a trackhoe would be fine since it was on tracks and not rubber wheels. I also said it was ok if they put planks of plywood down under a wheeled machine to help spread the load out.
Simply put, I did not want the tires of a "X" number of thousand pound machine driving over my drainfield and compressing the soil or the leach things, themselves. I pointed out to him that this would be hidden type of damage and something that "if" it ever created a problem, it might not be for several years and I simply do not want to risk anything to the drain field
Ok, he has since had a septic guy quit bidding on this job once this guy heard my 'demands' that a wheeled machine not be allowed on my drainfield.
Wheeled machine would include a regular backhoe/loader and also the truck that they'd need to bring the new septic tank in on.
Again, I said it was OK to do something like that if we had plywood "road" under the wheels, to help spread the weight.
My contractor said that woudln't work because "the outriggers on the backhoe alone, would punch right through the plywood"
(of course, my initial thought to that was...."you could put THREE or more layesrs under the outriggers", but I didn't say a word)
So...
Am I being on or off base, being so concerned about keeping heavy equipment off my drainfield???
10 year old house with septic tank/field and buried power line. We're adding onto house and will get too near the existing tank and build OVER the existing power feed.
We need to move both, last week the power feed was rerouted.
Now comes the tank. Builder says he's going to dig to our tank, pump it, fill it with concrete so this will not be a weak spot underground where my extended foundation might force it to settle...
He's going to dig a hole on the same plane as it some feet away, put another tank down there and then feed from house to new tank back to existing field.
I'm on a slight hill with house on the uphill side so the ONLY way they can get to the tank to dig it up, dig new hole and dig trenches to the existing drainfield is to take what ever equipment they use, OVER my existing drain field.
I told my contractor WAY before we signed anything, unequivically that when this time comes, in NO way do I want any heavy equipment driving ON TOP of my drain field.
(truth be told...I think they can squeeze a hoe to the side of it for most of this work)
I told him that a trackhoe would be fine since it was on tracks and not rubber wheels. I also said it was ok if they put planks of plywood down under a wheeled machine to help spread the load out.
Simply put, I did not want the tires of a "X" number of thousand pound machine driving over my drainfield and compressing the soil or the leach things, themselves. I pointed out to him that this would be hidden type of damage and something that "if" it ever created a problem, it might not be for several years and I simply do not want to risk anything to the drain field
Ok, he has since had a septic guy quit bidding on this job once this guy heard my 'demands' that a wheeled machine not be allowed on my drainfield.
Wheeled machine would include a regular backhoe/loader and also the truck that they'd need to bring the new septic tank in on.
Again, I said it was OK to do something like that if we had plywood "road" under the wheels, to help spread the weight.
My contractor said that woudln't work because "the outriggers on the backhoe alone, would punch right through the plywood"
(of course, my initial thought to that was...."you could put THREE or more layesrs under the outriggers", but I didn't say a word)
So...
Am I being on or off base, being so concerned about keeping heavy equipment off my drainfield???