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#1
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I have pinhole leak in my concrete basement floor. At worst, it leaks
maybe one drop every ten seconds. The water flows across the floor where I walk all the time, collects, and keeps the humidity high. It's more of a problem than "pinhole leak" would suggest. What can I do to stop the leak? It looks as if someone tried to patch it - the leak is in the middle of a small mounded-up area in an otherwise smooth concrete floor. (The floor is all painted.) It's about four feet from the sump pump and walls. There are some other leaks at the joints between the wall and floor. To help with these, I plan to extend the outlets of the gutters farther from the house, seal the joint between the garage and the concrete driveway apron, etc... But the pinhole leak is such a tiny leak - Is there some direct fix? I might try simple/cheap/quick fixes even if they're not guaranteed to solve the problem. Thanks for your help. |
#2
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#3
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#4
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#5
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![]() wrote in message ps.com... I have pinhole leak in my concrete basement floor. At worst, it leaks maybe one drop every ten seconds. The water flows across the floor where I walk all the time, collects, and keeps the humidity high. It's more of a problem than "pinhole leak" would suggest. What can I do to stop the leak? Think of your house as a concrete boat. If water is coming up a pinhole, thee is plenty more just below hte slab. You have to get rid of it. Recently, on Ask This Old House, they solved a similar problem by installing a sump and a pump. You should investigate doing that. Thee was a large amount of water, just a few inches below the concrete slab. They rented an electric jack hammer to break up the slab where needed. |
#6
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On 21 Sep 2006 11:23:09 -0700, "dpb" wrote:
To fix this problem is undoubtedly going to take the services of a qualified engineer who knows the local hydrology and can look at the particular house and see if there is a practical way to divert the water away. It might be this is one of those situations where the wall drain to the sump is the only economically feasible alternative. I'm a qualified engineer. I will look at the house and might even take a picture using my Kodak Instamatic. Send me $19,999.99 (plus shipping & handling). I'll take care of everything. TRUST ME !!!! By the way, what the **** is hydrology? Richard Simmons |
#7
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#8
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You need the following
![]() Make certain all downspout drains divert water well away from home. make certain grade is away from home all around so water doesnt run towards home. The actual; solution is a interior french drain with sump pump, to elmnate this water once and for all..... |
#9
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Before you do any of the things the others suggest, paint the floor.
With waterproof paint recommended for basement walls (maybe floors to, but the usual problem is walls). Back in 1961, my mother still owned the house she and her late husband had lived in, and the tenant complained about the wet basement (actually he had gotten a reduction in rent on the promise that he would fix the place up, but he never did anything except complain to the building department about the wet basement as he moved out owing some rent.) So the building department was after my mother, and the inspector told her that all she had to do was get this waterproof paint. Well my mother was 53 and I was 14 so I got the job of painting it, and I did my best but I'm pretty sure I painted some cobwebs right onto the wall. But it was under the stairs. The whole wall, floor to ceiling, side to side, only took an hour, iirc. I actually didn't think any of this would help, but apparently it solved the problem completely and for years thereafter, at least 5 but I think she had the house even after my motehr and her husband moved 700 miles away. That is, the basement was dry afterwards. The hardware store at Myrtle and Jay street in Brooklyn had a display of part of a cinder block, painted on one half and not on the other, with a pump circulating the water, and the water came right through the unpainted part and not a bit on the painted part. I would think the paint is as good now, hopefully even better than it was in 1961. I don't know if you need to take off the paint that is there now first or not, but if you have to paint it again no big deal. You only need do a square foot or so. I'm sure you can paint over the waterproof paint with paint that matches, or contrasts with, the rest of the floor. Don't go for hard ways to do things if you can do them easily. P&M On 21 Sep 2006 10:14:46 -0700, wrote: I have pinhole leak in my concrete basement floor. At worst, it leaks maybe one drop every ten seconds. The water flows across the floor where I walk all the time, collects, and keeps the humidity high. It's more of a problem than "pinhole leak" would suggest. What can I do to stop the leak? It looks as if someone tried to patch it - the leak is in the middle of a small mounded-up area in an otherwise smooth concrete floor. (The floor is all painted.) It's about four feet from the sump pump and walls. There are some other leaks at the joints between the wall and floor. To help with these, I plan to extend the outlets of the gutters farther from the house, seal the joint between the garage and the concrete driveway apron, etc... But the pinhole leak is such a tiny leak - Is there some direct fix? I might try simple/cheap/quick fixes even if they're not guaranteed to solve the problem. Thanks for your help. |
#11
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![]() mm wrote: Before you do any of the things the others suggest, paint the floor. With waterproof paint recommended for basement walls (maybe floors to, but the usual problem is walls). Been there tried that ![]() It helps on walls some but not floors where the water pressure will easily get the leak going again. dont get me wrong waterproof paint does seal, the trouble is adhesion it can bubble pewel off whatever its painted on espically old paint. |
#12
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I wrote:
... pinhole leak in my concrete basement floor ... What can I do ? Thanks all for the many responses so far. Please continue. Responding to various questions and comments: It's been a wet year (Northeast US). We have two sump pumps, one at each end of the (large) basement. Both work. Even when it's not raining, both sometimes run. Both sumps were dry one year ago when we bought the place. As was the floor. How deep should the sump holes be? The holes have some sort of liner on the sides, with holes for the water to enter through. Where should the highest hole be - right under the slab? The holes may be lower down... Thanks for pointing out that fixing one leak may cause others. I think I can improve the drainage from the gutters. Sounds like talking to an engineer would be a good idea. What's the right name for the kind of engineer I need - e.g., "Civil"? What's the best way to find a good one? Thanks again. |
#13
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wrote in message
ups.com... I wrote: ... pinhole leak in my concrete basement floor ... What can I do ? Thanks all for the many responses so far. Please continue. Responding to various questions and comments: It's been a wet year (Northeast US). We have two sump pumps, one at each end of the (large) basement. Both work. Even when it's not raining, both sometimes run. Both sumps were dry one year ago when we bought the place. As was the floor. How deep should the sump holes be? The holes have some sort of liner on the sides, with holes for the water to enter through. Where should the highest hole be - right under the slab? The holes may be lower down... Thanks for pointing out that fixing one leak may cause others. I think I can improve the drainage from the gutters. Sounds like talking to an engineer would be a good idea. What's the right name for the kind of engineer I need - e.g., "Civil"? What's the best way to find a good one? Thanks again. Structural engineer. Odd suggestion: Call your local fire chief. And, architects' offices. |
#14
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#16
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So yu have 2 sump pumps, but still have water coming out of floor
![]() Rent a jackhammer, or buy one from harbor freight. Run a perforated pipe from one of the sumps to the area where water comes out of floor, surround pipe with gravel. This will give the water, likely a underground stream a easy path to the pump and end your water problem ![]() I had to do this, add a leader in my old house after the permimeter french drain failed to elminate all the water.... I RECOMMEND you investigate a back up sump pump system in case you have a failure, like power goes out.theres battery or water powered if your on city water this also happened to me ![]() inches of water in basement, ruined brand new vinyl floor too.nearly cost me home sale too.... Ideeally sump drain by gravity to a spot well away from home below homes level, at least a overflow kinda drain. its imp[ossible to plug the type of leak you have, all you can do is redirect it elsewhere. I found out later a stream had run thru the property before the homes were built. stream just went underground surfacing in my basement. |
#17
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"mm" wrote in message
... On 22 Sep 2006 08:42:07 -0700, wrote: Sounds like talking to an engineer would be a good idea. What's the right name for the kind of engineer I need - e.g., "Civil"? Although they both work in construction, it seems that civil engineers are so named because they work for the govenment, from the Latin for citizen. So they build bridges and exways and I don't know what else. It took me decades to realize what made them civil. I thought they were just polite. What's the best way to find a good one? Thanks again. Not to change the subject, but somewhere recently, I heard this: God must be a civil engineer. Think of how women are designed. Who else but a CE would locate two raw sewage conduits right in a popular recreational area? |
#18
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Cut a groove from the leak to the sump and cover it to direct the water
to the sump and cover the groove to limit evaporation. wrote: I have pinhole leak in my concrete basement floor. At worst, it leaks maybe one drop every ten seconds. The water flows across the floor where I walk all the time, collects, and keeps the humidity high. It's more of a problem than "pinhole leak" would suggest. What can I do to stop the leak? It looks as if someone tried to patch it - the leak is in the middle of a small mounded-up area in an otherwise smooth concrete floor. (The floor is all painted.) It's about four feet from the sump pump and walls. There are some other leaks at the joints between the wall and floor. To help with these, I plan to extend the outlets of the gutters farther from the house, seal the joint between the garage and the concrete driveway apron, etc... But the pinhole leak is such a tiny leak - Is there some direct fix? I might try simple/cheap/quick fixes even if they're not guaranteed to solve the problem. Thanks for your help. |
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