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[email protected] hallerb@aol.com is offline
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Default Is it possible to pass a 2" PVC drain pipe under the slab?

On Dec 7, 12:05�pm, "MiamiCuse" wrote:
wrote in message

...





On Mon, 1 Dec 2008 16:18:09 -0800 (PST), wrote:


On Dec 1, 1:38 pm, wrote:
On Mon, 1 Dec 2008 02:15:30 -0500, "MiamiCuse"
wrote:


How did you attach the garden hose? Did you do a 2" to 3/4" female
adaptor
and connect the hose to that?


Yep I used a brass 3/4 NPT to hose adapter, just so I could reuse it.
The PVC parts are going to be trash.


The problem I see is since the hole in my slab is about 40" wide, and I
need
to span a 7' space under, I will not be able to put all 7' of pipe in
the
right position (under slab and pitching up) to start with. I will have
to
do 4' of it and then once all 4' are in, I will then have to take it
all
apart, then glue a 2" coupler, then glue another 3' of pipe and
reconnect
everything and continue again.


That should work, just cut the pipe a few inches from the elbow so you
have some pipe to glue to and splice in the extra pipe. With only 4'
in the ground you should be able to get it going again.
When you get it through cut off all the extra stuff and hook up your
riser for the sink and the lateral to the sewer. Just be sure to keep
it pitching down.
Here is a picture of the actual drill head I used, notice I left a
stub of pipe for another coupling, in case I need it again.


BTW a cable saw is the easiest way to cut a pipe in a hole but a piece
of nylon string will usually work.


http://esteroriverheights.com/electrical/drill_head.jpg


That looks good. �I think I will do the same. �I wonder if instead of
a 2" cap, I go from a 2" to a 1-1/4" reducer then from 1-1/4" to a
3/4" reducer with a 3/4" cap. �Drill a hole at the end of the 3/4"
cap, and three holes like you have it on the 2" side wall, whether it
will make the drilling easier since it will be a "sharper" drill, or
may be it will not.


Here is a picture of my layout:


http://i173.photobucket.com/albums/w.../trenching.jpg


On the upper right corner you can see the magenta shaded area that is
the area the slab is currently opened and assessible. �The thick blue
lines are the finished PVC drain configuration for that bathroom.


Further south is a 4' wide hallway then the kitchen. �Inside the
kitchen is a 7' 6" long narrow trench about 4" wide also cut open.
The southern tip of that trench is where the 2" drain needs to
starts. �There is no way I can start from the kitchen side. �I have to
start from the bathroom side and go at a 45 degree angle and pass
through the narrow trench on the kitchen side, and there I will put in
a riser to vent and tie into a pipe that will run south to the
island.. �The good news is I know what height that pipe needs to be at
on the bathroom side, it has to be at least higher than the 4" drain
right there. �The bad news is I cannot see how I can maintain a pitch
up as I push through so it ends at a particular elevation when it
emerges under the narrow trench. �Seems it would be very tricky and I
might end up just below the slab leaving no room for the 7' 6" run to
go "down".


I guess my question is, once you make it all the way through and can
see the pipe on both sides, is there any chance there may be room in
the sand you can "finess" the elevations of the pipe by moving back
and forth to arrive at a more desirable pitch? �My common sense tells
me no not for something as big as 2"?


Thanks!

I have shot a lot of sleeves under driveways. We always use a full
size cap (actually bigger than the pipe) so you can go fast. The
problem isn't washing a hole in the sand it is not washing too big a
hole.
Personally I would take a straight shot from the back corner of
bathroom 4 to the hole in the kitchen skipping the dog leg in the
hall. Just get your navigation right so you shoot in the right
direction.


After thinking about it I decided to take your advise and do a straight
shoot. �This increase the overall reach between the two spot to about 12'.

I started off and drew a straight line from the slab opening to the target
hole. �The tricky part is not the direction horizontally but vertically.
The main line is about 8" below grade, I figured over a 12' difference, at a
minimum slope of 1/4" per foot, I need a three inch drop between the two
points at least. �I then dug down to the main line and created a sand
trench. �Then I used a 2x6 piece of lumber 4' long and laid it down to
exactly how I want it with the proper slope, the pipe will be angled up the
ramp as I drill through, I don't know how else I can maintain a proper
up-slope.

I then did the assembly for the PVC pipe. �Since my slab is only 5.5' long,
I cannot position a very long piece into the trench, I must do the
drill/cut/glue/drill more deal.

I put a cap on the 2" pipe, cut the holes the way you did, I used a stepped
drill bit and that was really nice. �Then I cut the pipe to 5' long, the
most that can fit into the trench. �Then I glued a 2" santary tee at the
end. �One end connects to the 5' pipe, the other end I glued a reducer to
3/4" and then a hose adaptor and my garden hose will come in from there. �I
then glued a short section (6") to the top of the tee, and capped that off.
This short section is to be used as a leverage handle to help me push the
pipe in. �I also added a shutoff to the garden hose so I can turn on/off
right there without needing to run back to the hosebib.

Now this is where I ran into complications. �First I was not able to lay the
pipe all the way down as I had two copper piping across the path, they made
it not as easy to push the pipe along because I can squeeze through the pipe
but with the handle contraption at the end it's stucked. �I finness and
finness and was able to send about 4 feet into it, the trench pooled a bit
and I had to let it drain down with the hose shut off.

Now I need to saw off the end, and glue another 5' of PVC pipe with a socket
coupling to continue...so I stopped because I started to wonder if this
would work.

First, without being able to send in the whole pipe in one shot due to it's
length, and had to use repair couplings, I obviously cannot prime/glue the
joint, wait 15 minutes and continue. �These joints take a few seconds to
dry, but take up to 24 hours to cure. �Usually with PVC it's not a problem
since it's not under pressure and we can always leak test them. �But in this
situation, I will be twisting the PVC pipe and the joint will be subjected
to torsion, and if it takes 4 sections of pipe with 3 joints, me twisting on
one end will be passing that torgue through 3 joints to the drill head. �I
wanted to wait 24 hours for the joint the cure to have maximum effect.
After all, if it does bust loose I can't tell until it's too late.

My question is. in this case where a joint is necessary, what is my best
shot to prevent it from busting loose or partial leak? �There is no leak
test possible? �or I need to plug it at the low end when done, fill in water
on the high end with a garden hose and let it sit in pipe and see whether it
go away?

What would be the best joint I can make? �I know the 1-1/4" pipe has long
coupling and short coupling. �2" pipes seem to have only short couplings,
unless there are long ones I can special order. �I also wonder, if I should
just put in a 2.5" banded fernco coupling ON TOP OF the PVC coupling just to
give it additional rigidity and torgue resistance as I drill?

Any comments welcome.

I may be over thinking this but this is a one shot deal, if it fails I am
done I may not be able to back things out especially if the joint busts and
I can only back out one end of it.

Thanks,

MC- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


you can buy flexible pVC pipe in a variety of sizes. Stumbled onto it
when shopping for clear plastic PVC schedule 40 pipe for some kids
games I was building