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M Q June 4th 07 06:59 PM

Septic tank lid seal
 
I have a septic tank with round concrete lids at grade
level resting on a concrete riser.
As the concrete is a bit rough and uneven,
the lids do not seal very well.
Depending upon atmospheric and other conditions the
area is a bit malodorous.

How is a seal usually formed for such things?
Are there gaskets that are used? A ton of plumber's putty?
Something else?


dpb June 4th 07 07:46 PM

Septic tank lid seal
 
On Jun 4, 12:59 pm, M Q wrote:
I have a septic tank with round concrete lids at grade
level resting on a concrete riser.
As the concrete is a bit rough and uneven,
the lids do not seal very well.
Depending upon atmospheric and other conditions the
area is a bit malodorous.

How is a seal usually formed for such things?
Are there gaskets that are used? A ton of plumber's putty?
Something else?


Hopefully they're fabricated well enough to simply seat well enough on
their own. Most installations I've seen also have the tank set deeply
enough that the lids are below surface by at least a few inches and so
the ground prevents any air leakage.

If you can't cover them w/ ground (cover w/ plastic first to prevent
dirt entrance), I'd mix up a really thin paste of cement so it
wouldn't have much adhesion power and lay an inch around the lip and
the set the lid on it. Most any flexible material could be used in
the same manner.

--



dean June 4th 07 07:57 PM

Septic tank lid seal
 
On Jun 4, 2:46 pm, dpb wrote:
On Jun 4, 12:59 pm, M Q wrote:

I have a septic tank with round concrete lids at grade
level resting on a concrete riser.
As the concrete is a bit rough and uneven,
the lids do not seal very well.
Depending upon atmospheric and other conditions the
area is a bit malodorous.


How is a seal usually formed for such things?
Are there gaskets that are used? A ton of plumber's putty?
Something else?


Hopefully they're fabricated well enough to simply seat well enough on
their own. Most installations I've seen also have the tank set deeply
enough that the lids are below surface by at least a few inches and so
the ground prevents any air leakage.

If you can't cover them w/ ground (cover w/ plastic first to prevent
dirt entrance), I'd mix up a really thin paste of cement so it
wouldn't have much adhesion power and lay an inch around the lip and
the set the lid on it. Most any flexible material could be used in
the same manner.

--


Throw in a galon of bleach - it will stop most of the smell!

















(just kidding, BTW)


Steve Barker June 4th 07 07:57 PM

Septic tank lid seal
 
Put an appropriately sized bead of mortar mix around the top edge of the
tank. Cover it with heavy plastic. Set the lid on carefully. there, now
you have a surface that matches your lid, and it will still come off easily.

--
Steve Barker





"M Q" wrote in message
news:UpY8i.4903$554.1041@trnddc07...
I have a septic tank with round concrete lids at grade
level resting on a concrete riser.
As the concrete is a bit rough and uneven,
the lids do not seal very well.
Depending upon atmospheric and other conditions the
area is a bit malodorous.

How is a seal usually formed for such things?
Are there gaskets that are used? A ton of plumber's putty?
Something else?




Steve B June 4th 07 07:58 PM

Septic tank lid seal
 

"M Q" wrote in message
news:UpY8i.4903$554.1041@trnddc07...
I have a septic tank with round concrete lids at grade
level resting on a concrete riser.
As the concrete is a bit rough and uneven,
the lids do not seal very well.
Depending upon atmospheric and other conditions the
area is a bit malodorous.

How is a seal usually formed for such things?
Are there gaskets that are used? A ton of plumber's putty?
Something else?


A lot of them are out of whack, and will only fit in exactly one position.
Clean both surfaces and try rotating it until you get the best fit. Take a
crayon and mark it when you get a good fit. Do a couple of full turns to
make sure. You can make a lever to help you lift it, and if there's a rebar
lifter on the top, hang it from stout rope so you can twist it.

Oh yeah. Wear nose plugs, too.

Steve



The Reverend Natural Light June 4th 07 07:58 PM

Septic tank lid seal
 
How about a little bit of sand? Remove lid, spread a handful of sand
around the top of the rim, replace lid.

-rev



On Jun 4, 1:59 pm, M Q wrote:
I have a septic tank with round concrete lids at grade
level resting on a concrete riser.
As the concrete is a bit rough and uneven,
the lids do not seal very well.
Depending upon atmospheric and other conditions the
area is a bit malodorous.

How is a seal usually formed for such things?
Are there gaskets that are used? A ton of plumber's putty?
Something else?




dean June 4th 07 08:01 PM

Septic tank lid seal
 
On Jun 4, 2:58 pm, The Reverend Natural Light
wrote:
How about a little bit of sand? Remove lid, spread a handful of sand
around the top of the rim, replace lid.

-rev

On Jun 4, 1:59 pm, M Q wrote:



I have a septic tank with round concrete lids at grade
level resting on a concrete riser.
As the concrete is a bit rough and uneven,
the lids do not seal very well.
Depending upon atmospheric and other conditions the
area is a bit malodorous.


How is a seal usually formed for such things?
Are there gaskets that are used? A ton of plumber's putty?
Something else?- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


Wouldn't all the sand just fall in before you replaced the lid? (Sand
in a tank is supposed to be bad BTW - sewage truck drivers don't like
because it can't be vacuumed up)


The Reverend Natural Light June 4th 07 08:33 PM

Septic tank lid seal
 
On Jun 4, 3:01 pm, dean wrote:

How about a little bit of sand? Remove lid, spread a handful of sand
around the top of the rim, replace lid.


Wouldn't all the sand just fall in before you replaced the lid? (Sand
in a tank is supposed to be bad BTW - sewage truck drivers don't like
because it can't be vacuumed up)


Just enough sand to fill in the surface irregularities. As the lid is
set in place a little bit might end up falling into the tank but I
can't imagine that would hurt anything.

It would take two people to lift the lid and gently set it down rather
than sliding it in place - which would dislodge all the sand.

Just a thought.



-rev


Smitty Two June 4th 07 09:26 PM

Septic tank lid seal
 
In article UpY8i.4903$554.1041@trnddc07,
M Q wrote:

I have a septic tank with round concrete lids at grade
level resting on a concrete riser.
As the concrete is a bit rough and uneven,
the lids do not seal very well.
Depending upon atmospheric and other conditions the
area is a bit malodorous.

How is a seal usually formed for such things?
Are there gaskets that are used? A ton of plumber's putty?
Something else?


Is a grade level septic cover standard? Mine's about 12" underground.

[email protected] June 4th 07 10:48 PM

Septic tank lid seal
 

Is a grade level septic cover standard? Mine's about 12" underground.


bet it wouldnt meet code today......





Eigenvector June 5th 07 12:45 AM

Septic tank lid seal
 

wrote in message
ps.com...

Is a grade level septic cover standard? Mine's about 12" underground.


bet it wouldnt meet code today......


Yeah I was gonna say, mine is about 12" below ground too. I don't have to
worry about smell - its covered with 6" of loose soil and it fits tightly to
boot!.



Steve Barker June 5th 07 03:46 AM

Septic tank lid seal
 
Many places use "holding" tanks and they are set with grade level lids.
Some are even above ground completely.

--
Steve Barker





wrote in message
ps.com...

Is a grade level septic cover standard? Mine's about 12" underground.


bet it wouldnt meet code today......







Harry K June 5th 07 03:47 AM

Septic tank lid seal
 
On Jun 4, 4:45 pm, "Eigenvector" wrote:
wrote in message

ps.com...



Is a grade level septic cover standard? Mine's about 12" underground.


bet it wouldnt meet code today......


Yeah I was gonna say, mine is about 12" below ground too. I don't have to
worry about smell - its covered with 6" of loose soil and it fits tightly to
boot!.


Same here. Having dug it out and helped open/close it every 5 years
for 30 years I can gaurantee you that 'lifing it and setting itdown
gently, or rotating and trying the fit' ain't in the cards even with
a helper.

Harry K



Srinivas January 29th 18 07:44 PM

Septic tank lid seal
 
replying to M Q, Srinivas wrote:
Recently we are closed initial out let of septic tank and made new outlet
one feet above the initial one.but water is not coming from new outlet.what is
the problems.

--
for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...al-222546-.htm



[email protected] January 29th 18 08:07 PM

Septic tank lid seal
 
On Mon, 29 Jan 2018 19:44:01 GMT, Srinivas
m wrote:

replying to M Q, Srinivas wrote:
Recently we are closed initial out let of septic tank and made new outlet
one feet above the initial one.but water is not coming from new outlet.what is
the problems.


The outlet has to be below the inlet. Otherwise the water just backs
up in the pipe coming in.

=?iso-8859-15?Q?Tekkie=AE?= January 30th 18 07:37 PM

Septic tank lid seal
 
posted for all of us...



On Mon, 29 Jan 2018 19:44:01 GMT, Srinivas
m wrote:

replying to M Q, Srinivas wrote:
Recently we are closed initial out let of septic tank and made new outlet
one feet above the initial one.but water is not coming from new outlet.what is
the problems.


The outlet has to be below the inlet. Otherwise the water just backs
up in the pipe coming in.


Ya think?

--
Tekkie


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