bobrob1892
Computer
- Nov 17, 2006
- 4
I am in the process of replacing the original french drains around the North and East walls of a 30 year old home just purchased in Southern Ontario. There is a serious water seepage problem through the concrete block walls in the basement but not through the floor. A 7' deep, 3' wide and 30' total length trench (10 foot sections) has been dug to reach just below the foundation footing, and the walls have been shored. The old tiles are in fair shape but I plan to replace them with 6" geo-fabric covered perforated pipe. I have several question which require your expertise.
1. What material and what amounts of sand, 3/4" rocks, fabric, etc. should be used to construct the bedding for the pipe and then to cover the pipe? The pipe connects to a working section of the drain that takes the water to the sump pit inside the house.
2. Originally the concrete bock walls were parged with cement and sealed with a very thin layer of tar. The walls have been washed and metal brushed. There are horizontal cracks at the mortar joints in 4' lengths no larger than 1/8". Thera are a couple of vertical cracks along the mortar joints and right through the blocks about 6' long and 3/16" wide. What is the best method of sealing these cracks? My thought is to use hydraulic cement on the vertical cracks, then parge the wall with cement, cover the wall with "Blue tar", place an uninterrupted sheet of waterproofing dimpled membrane ( over everything, then backfill.
3. Where the cement blocks meet the foundation, there seems to be gaps allowing water to seep in. The parging cement partially covers these areas but it is fractured mostly. How would I go about sealing this area without taking out the old cement work?
4. The soil in this area is clay like and holds on to water, shoud I discard the earth removed and backfill with clean/engineered soil or mix the current soil with gravel or sand and then backfill?
Any suggestions will be greatly appreciated.
Bob
1. What material and what amounts of sand, 3/4" rocks, fabric, etc. should be used to construct the bedding for the pipe and then to cover the pipe? The pipe connects to a working section of the drain that takes the water to the sump pit inside the house.
2. Originally the concrete bock walls were parged with cement and sealed with a very thin layer of tar. The walls have been washed and metal brushed. There are horizontal cracks at the mortar joints in 4' lengths no larger than 1/8". Thera are a couple of vertical cracks along the mortar joints and right through the blocks about 6' long and 3/16" wide. What is the best method of sealing these cracks? My thought is to use hydraulic cement on the vertical cracks, then parge the wall with cement, cover the wall with "Blue tar", place an uninterrupted sheet of waterproofing dimpled membrane ( over everything, then backfill.
3. Where the cement blocks meet the foundation, there seems to be gaps allowing water to seep in. The parging cement partially covers these areas but it is fractured mostly. How would I go about sealing this area without taking out the old cement work?
4. The soil in this area is clay like and holds on to water, shoud I discard the earth removed and backfill with clean/engineered soil or mix the current soil with gravel or sand and then backfill?
Any suggestions will be greatly appreciated.
Bob