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OFWW[_5_] OFWW[_5_] is offline
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Default Weird Pipe Found Buried in Yard

On Sat, 02 Jun 2018 15:11:44 GMT, Puckdropper
wrote:

-MIKE- wrote in news

Funnier part... finding this pipe under the pad distracted me so much
that I forgot that I had already figured all this out. :-)
I can't use that path because it I would have to take a hard right
turn and then another left to go around the end of the septic system's
leach field. I don't like the prospect of pulling #6 through those
bends on a 100'+ run.

On the far edge of the driveway is a row of 80ft Poplars. Because I
don't want to dig through their major roots, I can't use a ditch-witch
to trench that path.

At the corner of the garage where I intended to start the underground
conduit, there is an expansion joint in the parking area pad with
asphalt expansion joint filler. The path along that joint is far
enough away from the leach bed and far enough from the tree roots that
I can go straight back along that expansion joint.
All I have to do is rent a concrete saw and make one cut a few inches
from the existing expansion joint and then fill it back in with
Quickcrete when I'm done laying the conduit.

That will be easier than hand digging a trench around 3-4" tree roots
and trying to weave the conduit over and under them.



My most recent wiring project was running outdoor rated CAT6 out to the
garage. You're already digging for one set of cable, might it be worth
digging for another? (Cat6 is easy to terminate, just use a punch down
connector and a decent punch tool.)

You can't run network cable close to power cable, though, unless you take
certain precautions. Parallel runs are a bad thing, but if you must go
close to power cables you can enclose the cable in a grounded pipe. I
didn't run in to these problems with my cable run, so I didn't research
them further.

Puckdropper


Nowadays it is far wiser to Wifi to the garage.

grounding issues are always a problem, and I am speaking about the
earth ground differences. It can create a capacitance that will blow
out a NIC and sometimes the whole computing device electronics.

Even on high rise bldgs over a large footprint the grounding may be
different from one side of the bldg to the other and so you cannot
directly link devices for that reason. I have seen serious signal
degradation even on a 60 ft underground run that really slowed down
communications. Enclosed in water tight conduit and verified it was
dry and no shorts due to scuffing when the cable was pulled.

Just a thought.