Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 35
Default Leak in my basement

I've got a leak in my basement coming from under the drywall. Behind the
drywall is a poured concrete wall. In the 4 years I've lived here I have
never had any problems like this. The house was built in 2001. This leak
started about the time I started to run the sprinkler system a couple of
weeks ago so assumed it was related to that, but now I've gotten some water
in the basement after a short heavy rain yesterday. So, now I'm thinking
that it might have something to do with a failure in the drainage tile
system, but I don't know.



Drawing of basement layout (sorry for the crude drawing):
http://pics.bbzzdd.com/users/Squisher/leak.jpg



Basement wall before the carpeting got wet:
http://pics.bbzzdd.com/users/Squisher/basement1.JPG



I adjusted the sprinkler heads so that they weren't spraying at all and dug
up around them to expose 8" of funny tube, then cycled the sprinkler system,
and made sure there weren't any leaks down below. I've now got them
spraying nicely away from the house and zero leaks.



I also pulled back all the sod along that wall and filled with top soil
where it needed to assure that there was a slope away from the house and
packed the topsoil nice and tight to the wall.



After doing all this work and still getting a little water after a sprinkler
cycle I really thought it was a problem of the lowest sprinkler head (back
by the doorwall) was draining all the water in the system after a cycle, but
now after that 15 minute rain storm yesterday and all the water that came
in, I'm not so sure given the fact that the too numerous to count all day
rain storms I've endured over the last four years went by without any
problems. I'm not in a high water table. My sump pump only cycles during
heavy rains.



I'm going to pull off some drywall to see if any insulation got wet and
address any issues there, but I need a solution for the leak. Given the
fact that so many "dry basement" companies are just pushing their system,
what contractor should I call out first and is there anything I can do
myself?



If it is a drainage tile problem, what is the best thing to do?



__________ Information from ESET NOD32 Antivirus, version of virus signature database 4267 (20090722) __________

The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus.

http://www.eset.com




  #2   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,926
Default Leak in my basement

On Jul 22, 12:14*pm, "CraigT" wrote:
I've got a leak in my basement coming from under the drywall. *Behind the
drywall is a poured concrete wall. In the 4 years I've lived here I have
never had any problems like this. The house was built in 2001. * This leak
started about the time I started to run the sprinkler system a couple of
weeks ago so assumed it was related to that, but now I've gotten some water
in the basement after a short heavy rain yesterday. *So, now I'm thinking
that it might have something to do with a failure in the drainage tile
system, but I don't know.

Drawing of basement layout (sorry for the crude drawing):http://pics.bbzzdd.com/users/Squisher/leak.jpg

Basement wall before the carpeting got wet:http://pics.bbzzdd.com/users/Squisher/basement1.JPG

I adjusted the sprinkler heads so that they weren't spraying at all and dug
up around them to expose 8" of funny tube, then cycled the sprinkler system,
and made sure there weren't any leaks down below. *I've now got them
spraying nicely away from the house and zero leaks.

I also pulled back all the sod along that wall and filled with top soil
where it needed to assure that there was a slope away from the house and
packed the topsoil nice and tight to the wall.

After doing all this work and still getting a little water after a sprinkler
cycle I really thought it was a problem of *the lowest sprinkler head (back
by the doorwall) was draining all the water in the system after a cycle, but
now after that 15 minute rain storm yesterday and all the water that came
in, I'm not so sure given the fact that the too numerous to count all day
rain storms I've endured over the last four years went by without any
problems. *I'm not in a high water table. My sump pump only cycles during
heavy rains.

I'm going to pull off some drywall to see if any insulation got wet and
address any issues there, but I need a solution for the leak. *Given the
fact that so many "dry basement" companies are just pushing their system,
what contractor should I call out first and is there anything I can do
myself?

If it is a drainage tile problem, what is the best thing to do?

__________ Information from ESET NOD32 Antivirus, version of virus signature database 4267 (20090722) __________

The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus.

http://www.eset.com


Its only 8 yrs old and through normal settling a few cracks likely,
hopfully, opened, removing drywall is a good idea. If you find cracks
you can fix them inside yourself. I have old walls and used foamboard
for insulation and covered it with paneling , all made to be removed
and replaced for a situation like yours. If wall is just soaking wet
from high water then maybe 5 coats of UGL or another waterproofing,
and keep the wall open till you figure out a fix. Its now wet and
likely full of mold behind the drywall, just use laundry bleach to
soak the area to kill whats growing, you can do the work in maybe a
day, or pay thousands. If basement is humid, above 65% or so humidity,
get a dehumidifer.
  #3   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5,149
Default Leak in my basement

CraigT wrote:
I've got a leak in my basement coming from under the drywall. Behind the
drywall is a poured concrete wall. In the 4 years I've lived here I have
never had any problems like this. The house was built in 2001. This leak
started about the time I started to run the sprinkler system a couple of
weeks ago so assumed it was related to that, but now I've gotten some water
in the basement after a short heavy rain yesterday. So, now I'm thinking
that it might have something to do with a failure in the drainage tile
system, but I don't know.



Double checking the sprinkler, and touching up the landscaping, was a
good idea. Likely failure point is the outside waterproofing on the
wall, and/or a metal form tie that got left in wall and rusted out, or
was not clipped and sealed over properly. I have one like that in my 40
year old poured wall, that I need to get an epoxy injection kit for. No
painless way to expose the outside wall and repair from the outside. In
your case, if you can localize the leak point, you can peel back the
sod, dig a pit, inject epoxy and spot-patch the water seal the proper
way. Is there water sealer (the black or gray stuff) showing above the
sod line on the sloped wall? Bare concrete below finish grade level is a
problem, and many people like to had the nasty black line.

In my case, the proximate cause of the problem was pretty obvious. Idiot
previous owner left an abandoned concrete patio under an 18" tall deck,
and along with it heaving, he also put a slightly raised plant bed
around the outside. Heavy rain, and there was a lake under the deck,
slowly draining into the basement through the failed sealing and rusted
out tie bar hole. I solved most of the problem by scraping the old patio
with a long-handled hoe to remove debris, and cutting a drain channel
out through the plant bed.

Time to demo the drywall to expose the leak. Start with a strip at the
bottom, to narrow down where the leak is. Then go up there, until you
see where the water is coming through. If you are hiring out the new
drywall, probably just as cheap to demo whole wall, rather than try to
patch it in. Unless the leak is only at slab level, your drain tiles are
probably fine. If it is high on wall, like I suspect, it is coming from
someplace else. Rainstorm-related says it is probably surface or
near-surface water causing the problem.

Good example of why I'll never finish out a basement, and if I stay in
this house, will likely end up UNfinishing it. IMHO, subterranean rooms
SHOULD be concrete.

Oh, and while I am ranting- IMHO, many of those 'inside solution'
basement dry-out companies are con artists. Had one come here and they
tried to high-pressure me into signing a contract Right Then, for 7
grand, to put in interior drains. Quoted 15 grand to dig out the
backfill and reseal the outside/replace failed perimeter drains, which
was the correct solution. Claimed doing slit trenching is now illegal,
and they would have to kill all the trees and dig yard out to a 45
degree slope to expose the wall. That is when I told him I grew up in
the business, and I knew he was spouting BS, and basically threw him
out. Sure was a slick pitch though, he even brought a cute little
portable printer and gave me a stack of shiny pictures that he covered
with circles and arrows using a red sharpie. I can easily see how
homeowners with no background in residential construction could be
panicked in to signing Right Then, and handing over a big check.

Before the flames start- yes, there are some lots and some houses where
inside drains are the only viable solution. In many cases, those lots
never should have been built on, or there should not have been a
basement. But they are the exception, not the first solution out of the
box for a minor leak like I have.
--
aem sends...
  #4   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
Joe Joe is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,837
Default Leak in my basement

On Jul 22, 12:14*pm, "CraigT" wrote:
I've got a leak in my basement coming from under the drywall.


snip


Can we assume your gutters and downspouts, etc., are all working and
correctly placed?

Joe
  #5   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2
Default Leak in my basement

On Jul 23, 1:33*am, Joe wrote:
On Jul 22, 12:14*pm, "CraigT" wrote:

I've got a leak in my basement coming from under the drywall.
snip


Can we assume your gutters and downspouts, etc., are all working and
correctly placed?

Joe


I don't have an answer but I have a similar problem in my house and
wondering if I can get suggestions on how to fix. My house was built
in 2002. When it rains really heavy outside I notice a puddle of water
on the basement floor. I have concluded that the water is leaking in
where the sewage pipe goes through the foundation and out to the
street. I have found a couple of people talking about this problem,
one person said to seal it from the inside, another said you need to
dig outside to where the pipe leaves the founadation and cover with a
tar product. Whats the way to solve this problem? Is this something a
plumber could repair?


  #6   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,500
Default Leak in my basement

On Jul 23, 1:33*am, Joe wrote:
On Jul 22, 12:14*pm, "CraigT" wrote:

I've got a leak in my basement coming from under the drywall.
snip


Can we assume your gutters and downspouts, etc., are all working and
correctly placed?

Joe


And the only way to know for sure is to go outside in a heavy rain and
take a look. As an example, you could have a piece of corrugated
pipe attached to a downspout and it could appear fine. But in a
heavy rain, if it's not pulled up far enough and high enough over the
downspout, I've seen water pouring out.
  #7   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 959
Default Leak in my basement


"MoopMeep" wrote in message
...
On Jul 23, 1:33 am, Joe wrote:
On Jul 22, 12:14 pm, "CraigT" wrote:

I've got a leak in my basement coming from under the drywall.
snip


Can we assume your gutters and downspouts, etc., are all working and
correctly placed?

Joe


I don't have an answer but I have a similar problem in my house and
wondering if I can get suggestions on how to fix. My house was built
in 2002. When it rains really heavy outside I notice a puddle of water
on the basement floor. I have concluded that the water is leaking in
where the sewage pipe goes through the foundation and out to the
street. I have found a couple of people talking about this problem,
one person said to seal it from the inside, another said you need to
dig outside to where the pipe leaves the founadation and cover with a
tar product. Whats the way to solve this problem? Is this something a
plumber could repair?

Just get a spade and digg it up , use hydraulk water block cement on any
cracks and tar the hell out of it...Friggin around inside is a waste of time
and money....

  #8   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,644
Default Leak in my basement

On Jul 27, 12:24�am, "benick" wrote:
"MoopMeep" wrote in message

...
On Jul 23, 1:33 am, Joe wrote:

On Jul 22, 12:14 pm, "CraigT" wrote:


I've got a leak in my basement coming from under the drywall.
snip


Can we assume your gutters and downspouts, etc., are all working and
correctly placed?


Joe


I don't have an answer but I have a similar problem in my house and
wondering if I can get suggestions on how to fix. My house was built
in 2002. When it rains really heavy outside I notice a puddle of water
on the basement floor. I have concluded that the water is leaking in
where the sewage pipe goes through the foundation and out to the
street. I have found a couple of people talking about this problem,
one person said to seal it from the inside, another said you need to
dig outside to where the pipe leaves the founadation and cover with a
tar product. Whats the way to solve this problem? Is this something a
plumber could repair?

� Just get a spade and digg it up , use hydraulk water block cement on any
cracks and tar the hell out of it...Friggin around inside is a waste of time
and money....


YOU CANT SEAL WATER OUT! YOUR BASEMENT ISNT A REVERSE BATHTUB!

The ONLY solution is redirecting the water from away and under your
home. the high basement humidities just lead to mold growth even if
the water isnt puddling inside.

the cheapest solution is a indoor french drain with sump pump to move
the water far away from your home
  #9   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4
Default Leak in my basement


YOU CANT SEAL WATER OUT! YOUR BASEMENT ISNT A REVERSE BATHTUB!

The ONLY solution is redirecting the water from away and under your
home. the high basement humidities just lead to mold growth even if
the water isnt puddling inside.

the cheapest solution is a indoor french drain with sump pump to move
the water far away from your home


I agree with bob haller on this.

What causes basements to leak is an over saturated soil around the
foundation. A hole was dug, in order for the basement to be built.
After the walls were up, the area around the foundation was back
filled with dirt. That dirt is more lose and more porous than the
undisturbed soil around it and it takes many years, sometimes decades
for that soil to settle and become as hard packed as the undisturbed
surroundings.
Therefore it acts like a sponge, soaking up rain water, and in your
case the sprinkler water as well. The resulting hydrostatic pressure
causes the water to infiltrate the basement walls, through cracks in
the concrete, through the joint between the floor an the walls, and
through the porous concrete itself due to capillary action.
Therefore the way to keep basements dry is to keep that soil around
the foundation as dry as possible.

Slope the terrain away from the house, keep gutters clean and
downspouts discharging as far as possible, keep sprinklers and hoses
away from the walls as well as any plants that need constant watering.

However you can't prevent rain from soaking your yard. And this is why
houses are built with a french drain buried by the foundation footing.
To help relieve the hydrostatic pressure by draining rain water and
discharging it somewhere. Unless your home is very old, chances are
that you do have one in place, hopefully in charge of diverting the
water to that sump pump you mention you have. (I say hopefully because
we've seem houses in which the drain tile is tied to nothing and leads
nowhere, believe it or not.)

The problem with those drain tiles is that, they fail overtime. Which
is what probably happened in your case, after 4 years functioning
properly. It is probably clogged or collapsed. In addition, because
they are buried, they can't be serviced when collapsed or flushed
when clogged with mud and debris without digging out the foundation
(and then making the dirt around it all loose and sponge-like again
when you fill it back) and replacing the drain tile. If you have
porches, decks, fixtures... well they will have to come off too.

This is why internal perimeter drainage systems were invented, and
have been used successfully for over 20 years. They work like the
external ones do: collect the water from the surrounding soil, divert
it to a sump pump which gets it out and away from the basement. They
can be installed internally, with much less disruption, for a fraction
of the cost (about 50% less) of digging out foundations, and can be
fully serviced over the years, which is why good reputable companies
offer lifetime transferable warranty on them.

Just make sure you pick a company that has been in business long
enough, so that you know that they will be there for years to come to
to honor the warranty they give you, and good companies usually don't
have obnoxious sales tactics. Call 3 in you area and sign nothing you
are not absolutely comfortable with.

Oh, and one more tip. Even if you do sign something and then regret,
every state in the US has a version of the FTC cooling off rules,
which gives you a certain amount of time (usually 3 days, some states
less, so please check the time in your area) to cancel any contract
signed or purchase made outside the provider/seller's place of
business, (that means your home), without incurring in any
cancellation fees or penalties. This rule was created exactly to
protect people from pushy door-to-door sales people. So feel free to
shop around until you find a company and system that really makes
sense to you.

Hope this helps.
  #10   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,644
Default Leak in my basement

On Jul 27, 11:58�am, Cy Freeney wrote:
YOU CANT SEAL WATER OUT! YOUR BASEMENT ISNT A REVERSE BATHTUB!


The ONLY solution is redirecting the water from away and under your
home. the high basement humidities just lead to mold growth even if
the water isnt puddling inside.


the cheapest solution is a indoor french drain with sump pump to move
the water far away from your home


I agree with bob haller on this.

What causes basements to leak is an over saturated soil around the
foundation. A hole was dug, in order for the basement to be built.
After the walls were up, the area around the foundation was back
filled with dirt. That dirt is more lose and more porous than the
undisturbed soil around it and it takes many years, sometimes decades
for that soil to settle and become as hard packed as the undisturbed
surroundings.
Therefore it acts like a sponge, soaking up rain water, and in your
case the sprinkler water as well. The resulting hydrostatic pressure
causes the water to infiltrate the basement walls, through cracks in
the concrete, through the joint between the floor an the walls, and
through the porous concrete itself due to capillary action.
Therefore the way to keep basements dry is to keep that soil around
the foundation as dry as possible.

Slope the terrain away from the house, keep gutters clean and
downspouts discharging as far as possible, keep sprinklers and hoses
away from the walls as well as any plants that need constant watering.

However you can't prevent rain from soaking your yard. And this is why
houses are built with a french drain buried by the foundation footing.
To help relieve the hydrostatic pressure by draining rain water and
discharging it somewhere. Unless your home is very old, chances are
that you do have one in place, hopefully in charge of diverting the
water to that sump pump you mention you have. (I say hopefully because
we've seem houses in which the drain tile is tied to nothing and leads
nowhere, believe it or not.)

The problem with those drain tiles is that, they fail overtime. Which
is what probably happened in your case, after 4 years functioning
properly. It is probably clogged or collapsed. In addition, because
they are buried, �they can't be serviced when collapsed or flushed
when clogged with mud and debris without digging out the foundation
(and then making the dirt around it all loose and sponge-like again
when you fill it back) and replacing the drain tile. If you have
porches, decks, fixtures... well they will have to come off too.

This is why internal perimeter drainage systems were invented, and
have been used successfully for over 20 years. They work like the
external ones do: collect the water from the surrounding soil, divert
it to a sump pump which gets it out and away from the basement. �They
can be installed internally, with much less disruption, for a fraction
of the cost (about 50% less) of digging out foundations, and can be
fully serviced over the years, which is why good reputable companies
offer lifetime transferable warranty on them.

Just make sure you pick a company that has been in business long
enough, so that you know that they will be there for years to come to
to honor the warranty they give you, and good companies usually don't
have obnoxious sales tactics. �Call 3 in you area and sign nothing you
are not absolutely comfortable with.

Oh, and one more tip. Even if you do sign something and then regret,
every state in the US has a version of the FTC cooling off rules,
which gives you a certain amount of time (usually 3 days, some states
less, so please check the time in your area) to cancel any contract
signed or purchase made outside the provider/seller's place of
business, (that means your home), without incurring in any
cancellation fees or penalties. This rule was created exactly to
protect people from pushy door-to-door sales people. So feel free to
shop around until you find a company and system that really makes
sense to you.

Hope this helps.


Yeah my moms house had bad water problems, installed exterior french
drain aroundf most of home, all new downspout drain lines to daylight
at street, regraded entire yard, replaced sidewalks steps and part of
driveway. I was really proud, within 4 months the water was again
coming in basement

Interior french drain fixed it fine for 3 grand

the outdoor work cost 9 grand plus me as a laborer for free,,,,

should of done the interior french drain first!!
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Basement leak (with pictures) Gary Poltergeist Home Repair 7 March 3rd 09 12:36 AM
Leak in basement around PVC pipe through foundation [email protected] Home Repair 8 October 15th 08 03:33 AM
Hydraulic cement & basement leak Buck Home Repair 6 April 21st 07 02:11 PM
Basement Bulkhead Leak [email protected] Home Ownership 4 October 10th 05 12:53 PM
stoping a leak in basement Longshot Home Repair 8 September 27th 05 02:50 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:13 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"