oregongirl23
Apr 4, 2007, 09:30 AM
Hi all,
I have groundwater entering my basement during storms at one single point in the floor, and at no other place currently. It is earthen in the small area where the water enters. I can pinpoint the point of entrace with a pencil tip! The water drains down a worn channel about one foot in distance to the untrapped main sewer drain. If I don't leave the main sewer drain uncapped, my basement floods. I know there is the danger potential for gas emissions through the open sewer drain but at this point I have no other choice. My basement has no trapped floor drain. The house was built in 1915. The majority of the basement floor (including where the sewer drain is located) is poured concrete. I have spoken to many contractors - both waterproofing experts and plumbers. The waterproofers are only willing to install a sump pump & tell me if I want a trapped drain installed & tied in to the main sewer drain that I will need to call a plumber. The plumbers I call don't want to install the trapped drain and tell me I need a sump pump.
My question: is there any reason why installing a drain where the water currently flows to would not be a solution? And would there be any additional benefit of installing a sump pump? How I see it is that someone has kept this basement dry by using the open sewer drain for nearly 100 years - and I can't afford a sump pump right now, nor do I want the constant electric usage, nor do I believe the sump pump is necessary in my situation.
What do you think? Thanks very much for your time whoever replies to my post!!
I have groundwater entering my basement during storms at one single point in the floor, and at no other place currently. It is earthen in the small area where the water enters. I can pinpoint the point of entrace with a pencil tip! The water drains down a worn channel about one foot in distance to the untrapped main sewer drain. If I don't leave the main sewer drain uncapped, my basement floods. I know there is the danger potential for gas emissions through the open sewer drain but at this point I have no other choice. My basement has no trapped floor drain. The house was built in 1915. The majority of the basement floor (including where the sewer drain is located) is poured concrete. I have spoken to many contractors - both waterproofing experts and plumbers. The waterproofers are only willing to install a sump pump & tell me if I want a trapped drain installed & tied in to the main sewer drain that I will need to call a plumber. The plumbers I call don't want to install the trapped drain and tell me I need a sump pump.
My question: is there any reason why installing a drain where the water currently flows to would not be a solution? And would there be any additional benefit of installing a sump pump? How I see it is that someone has kept this basement dry by using the open sewer drain for nearly 100 years - and I can't afford a sump pump right now, nor do I want the constant electric usage, nor do I believe the sump pump is necessary in my situation.
What do you think? Thanks very much for your time whoever replies to my post!!