bootspurs
Mechanical
- Jul 20, 2010
- 7
4 years ago, we installed a french drain that runs 50' parallel to the back of our house, then turns for another 44' to run down the side yard to the street. Our lot is lower than any of our neighbors, so we get all the runoff, and I imagine that we're that much closer to what seems like a high water table.
The drain we installed had 3" perforated corrugated pipe with filter fabric wrapped around only the pipe. The pipe was set in a bed of drain rock and covered, and I thought we sloped it at 1/8" per foot slope (which is the maximum slope I can get; literally a 12" drop over 94' total length). The pipe had a cap on the uphill side, and drained to the street on the downhill end.
This year we had flooding again, and last weekend I dug up the french drain. The pipe was literally packed with dirt for the first 50' of length, and was pretty muddy for the rest of it.
I now know now that the original design was wrong; with that minimal slope, we should have been using a smooth-wall pipe and made sure the slope was accurate for the entire drain. When we dug it up, there were sections that were not sloped at all, not good. Also, I have learned that common practice is to line the entire trench in filter fabric, not just the pipe.
Based on the amount of soil that infiltrated the pipe through the fabric, I'd say that our soil is more on the clay side of the spectrum than the sandy side, and the fine clay particulates are passing through the fabric.
Similar posts here have discussed using only sand as a filter, with no gravel or drain fabric, because the sand can filter the fine particulates that the fabric can not. This sounds reasonable to me, but when I tell my plan to landscaper friends, they say it's crazy to use only sand, but none have ever done it to know for sure. Just because most landscapers have been installing pipe/rock/fabric french drains everywhere doesn't make it right. Do folks still agree, sand would be the way to go? Any minimum depth around the pipe?
Another question: the fabric can get clogged by the clay, making the drain useless; can the sand can also get clogged, but just take much longer to do so?
The actual position of my triple-wall perforated drain pipe will be limited based on the start and end points and limited elevation delta.
My thought is to dig my trench as deep as I can swing it--maybe 30 or 36" at the lowest point--and start filling the trench with sand, no fabric or rock. I would consider wrapping the pipe in drain fabric to keep the sand from washing into the drain holes, but that would be the only point of the fabric.
Also, right now our gutter downspouts tie into the same single drain, but I plan to install parallel pipes in the trench; a solid pipe for surface collection and downspouts, and a perforated pipe for a dedicated french drain. The pipes would tie in just before the street outlet (I only have one outlet through my curb--I'm still kicking myself that I didn't drill two holes in the curb).
Thanks for any and all feedback about this.
The drain we installed had 3" perforated corrugated pipe with filter fabric wrapped around only the pipe. The pipe was set in a bed of drain rock and covered, and I thought we sloped it at 1/8" per foot slope (which is the maximum slope I can get; literally a 12" drop over 94' total length). The pipe had a cap on the uphill side, and drained to the street on the downhill end.
This year we had flooding again, and last weekend I dug up the french drain. The pipe was literally packed with dirt for the first 50' of length, and was pretty muddy for the rest of it.
I now know now that the original design was wrong; with that minimal slope, we should have been using a smooth-wall pipe and made sure the slope was accurate for the entire drain. When we dug it up, there were sections that were not sloped at all, not good. Also, I have learned that common practice is to line the entire trench in filter fabric, not just the pipe.
Based on the amount of soil that infiltrated the pipe through the fabric, I'd say that our soil is more on the clay side of the spectrum than the sandy side, and the fine clay particulates are passing through the fabric.
Similar posts here have discussed using only sand as a filter, with no gravel or drain fabric, because the sand can filter the fine particulates that the fabric can not. This sounds reasonable to me, but when I tell my plan to landscaper friends, they say it's crazy to use only sand, but none have ever done it to know for sure. Just because most landscapers have been installing pipe/rock/fabric french drains everywhere doesn't make it right. Do folks still agree, sand would be the way to go? Any minimum depth around the pipe?
Another question: the fabric can get clogged by the clay, making the drain useless; can the sand can also get clogged, but just take much longer to do so?
The actual position of my triple-wall perforated drain pipe will be limited based on the start and end points and limited elevation delta.
My thought is to dig my trench as deep as I can swing it--maybe 30 or 36" at the lowest point--and start filling the trench with sand, no fabric or rock. I would consider wrapping the pipe in drain fabric to keep the sand from washing into the drain holes, but that would be the only point of the fabric.
Also, right now our gutter downspouts tie into the same single drain, but I plan to install parallel pipes in the trench; a solid pipe for surface collection and downspouts, and a perforated pipe for a dedicated french drain. The pipes would tie in just before the street outlet (I only have one outlet through my curb--I'm still kicking myself that I didn't drill two holes in the curb).
Thanks for any and all feedback about this.