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Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems. |
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The original patching on the interior wall was very thin. I broke it
open and filled the hole with hydraulic cement. Water came through with the next rain. I chiseled a groove around the pipe and filled with epoxy. Still have water. I have dug a hole on the exterior and exposed the pipe. What type of goop should be applied here? And how the heck should I test it, because I've discovered that the shovel is not my tool of choice? Thanks for any help. |
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If you really want to seal around a pipe entry into a foundation or any kind
of crack in a foundation you'll need to mimic what they do at the "Crack Team" http://www.thecrackteam.com/ They're originally located in the St Louis area and did work on my Sister's house. I watched them do it -- they use clean the crack or the area around the pipe and used epoxy to seal the outside of the crack and also seal injection nozels over the crack they they inject and poly whatever under pressure into the crack that fills it up and no more leaks. wrote in message ups.com... It is definitely a ground water leak. As you suspected, there are three downspouts in the area. I am moving the two biggest ones away from the trouble area and redirecting the third. The ground has settled over twenty years, causing a depression. I will backfill this area, under the mulch, to create a better drainage grade. There is not an obvious crack or hole in the foundation. The water supply line appears to have been forced/bent to meet the drilled hole in the foundation. I suspect the downward pressure over the years between the pipe and concrete has created a gap under the pipe that is not visible, but is plenty big enough for water. The "dirt" around the pipe is more clay than dirt. wrote: wrote: The original patching on the interior wall was very thin. I broke it open and filled the hole with hydraulic cement. Water came through with the next rain. I chiseled a groove around the pipe and filled with epoxy. Still have water. I have dug a hole on the exterior and exposed the pipe. What type of goop should be applied here? And how the heck should I test it, because I've discovered that the shovel is not my tool of choice? Thanks for any help. is the pipe leaking? if it is it must be replaced....... is the problem ground water? sounds like thats it. does it have a easy path say broken plugged downspouts gutters, drain lines? ground lower at home or away from home? we need more info |
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