StaceyH
Dec 17, 2009, 07:35 PM
Hi, you guys have been very helpful in the past, so I'm hoping you have some good suggestions for us. My question has a few parts.
We live in eastern Washington State, so our winters are cold and dry. Temps can be below freezing for much of Nov, Dec, Jan, and even Feb. We built a house 3 1/2 years ago that has a septic system. Pressurized drain field. For the first time the system froze last week. When the septic guy came out, he said our indexing valve had frozen. The indexing valve rotates what part of the drainfield the effluent come out of, apparently. This valve is housed in a riser, with no insulation around it. We asked why it hadn't frozen in the past 3 winters, and the response was that possibly in past years we have gotten snow on the ground prior to the REALLY cold weather, and this snow provided some insulation. Sounds reasonable. The fix was to put some fiberglass insulation in the riser once they got the indexing valve thawed.
Questions: Does this make sense to you, and if yes, should this riser have been insulated when they installed the system, to prevent this from happening in the first place? The guy who came to fix is the installer. He's been in business for 20+ years. We are concerned that this might not be enough to prevent further freezing, and also we were charged $415 for this service. A service call of $85, plus $300 in labor for 2 guys to come "thaw" my indexing valve (using MY hot water and MY bucket), plus $30 for materials (a 1'x1' piece of fiberglass insulation.) So, in short, we are wondering if you think the charges are fair, especially in light of the fact that this guy didn't insulate this riser to begin with, and also want to make sure this will actually fix the problem. Any input will be greatly appreciated. We want to be fair to our repairman, but don't have a really good feeling about this particular visit.
Thanks,
Stacey
We live in eastern Washington State, so our winters are cold and dry. Temps can be below freezing for much of Nov, Dec, Jan, and even Feb. We built a house 3 1/2 years ago that has a septic system. Pressurized drain field. For the first time the system froze last week. When the septic guy came out, he said our indexing valve had frozen. The indexing valve rotates what part of the drainfield the effluent come out of, apparently. This valve is housed in a riser, with no insulation around it. We asked why it hadn't frozen in the past 3 winters, and the response was that possibly in past years we have gotten snow on the ground prior to the REALLY cold weather, and this snow provided some insulation. Sounds reasonable. The fix was to put some fiberglass insulation in the riser once they got the indexing valve thawed.
Questions: Does this make sense to you, and if yes, should this riser have been insulated when they installed the system, to prevent this from happening in the first place? The guy who came to fix is the installer. He's been in business for 20+ years. We are concerned that this might not be enough to prevent further freezing, and also we were charged $415 for this service. A service call of $85, plus $300 in labor for 2 guys to come "thaw" my indexing valve (using MY hot water and MY bucket), plus $30 for materials (a 1'x1' piece of fiberglass insulation.) So, in short, we are wondering if you think the charges are fair, especially in light of the fact that this guy didn't insulate this riser to begin with, and also want to make sure this will actually fix the problem. Any input will be greatly appreciated. We want to be fair to our repairman, but don't have a really good feeling about this particular visit.
Thanks,
Stacey