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orangetrader
 
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I asked them that. They told me the soil will get moist four to five feet
deep, but not soaking wet.

O

"EL" wrote in message
...
"O",

Have you or the contractor considered that this tunneling might go down

far enough to hit water? I know when I lived in
Jupiter (FL), the water table was only 2.5-3 feet below the floor level of

our house.

I have a feeling that if the tunnel went down to the level of the water

table, things could get (even more) complicated real
fast.

Eric Law

"orangetrader" wrote in message

news
I need to have someone come dig a tunnel to access a "Y" connection in

the
sewer line that needed to be replaced. Access from above is too

problematic
and messy.

The quote I got is $187 per foot of digging. They will need to dig down
several feet beyond the footing, then dig a horizontal tunnel six feet

over
to the location of the pipe. Because we are in Miami and near the

beach,
the soil is all sandy, I guess when they tunnel, the compacted sand

above
the tunnel will fall? This means more dirt will be removed from the

tunnel.
Now when they finished repairing or replacing the drain line, they told

me
they can just throw the dirt back into the tunnel and all will be ok.

I wonder how you will throw the dirt back into the tunnel to fill the

space
below the slab and above the footing? Can this really be done? Does it

not
require some sort of a sand/dirt pump? Even if this is doable it will

not
be compacted right?

Will this cause the line to be "suspended" and not resting on dirt and

will
that cause future failure - possibly the weight of water going through

may
create a back pitch? Will the foundation settle as a result of this

dig?

Thanks for any comments,

O