...We're building a house, and this is a case of my getting a good deal on some construction materials but not knowing exactly where it should be used. I honestly just figured it was better quality than what we'd use if I didn't buy it. Does foundation perimeter drain need to be 6" in diameter? If not, the 4" is a lot less money!
Thanks,
Todd
I am not a contractor, but a "very advanced amateur" in the house building and construction areas. I have built two houses, one detached garage, and numerous upgrades (roofs, fences, retaining walls, concrete slabs, combination slab and retaining wall footings, re-plumbed several houses, and new electrical in an entire house). In my early life, the most expensive projects I did always involved getting a good deal, or maybe even free, construction materials and then trying to engineer the whole project, or a major component, around this "screaming deal".
After I added up the extra cost and looked at the cost of using the right materials in the first place, I always lost thousands, if not tens of thousands, on projects involving this kind of "saving".
When I sat down, looked at the problems, and the extra cost I decided not to do this any more. When I actually stopped doing it was a big part of the step from "amateur" to "advanced amateur".
The real bottom line here is that you need to pay a soils engineer to look at the type of soil you have, and the configuration of the grades and house to decide if you need 6" or 4" foundation perimeter drain. The part of the pipe where you collect water needs to be perforated and maybe socked pipe. (The holes go down, at 4 and 6 o'clock, not up.) The pipe that conducts the water away should be solid.