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sam1978 wrote:Yummy.
MaxPower wrote:sam1978 wrote:Yummy.
samlal/Wraith King/matr1x aka Slim,
How many calories in a rat?
Btw were your other accounts deleted or suspended?
randolphinshan wrote:MaxPower wrote:sam1978 wrote:Yummy.
samlal/Wraith King/matr1x aka Slim,
How many calories in a rat?
Btw were your other accounts deleted or suspended?
Hello Brother Max
Ignore this fool Matrix aka Slim he is not relevant now or ever was
MaxPower wrote:
It appears that we may have found our fork lift guy.
MaxPower wrote:Friends,
Try to keep your places clean.
Clear and clean your houses both inside and out.
VexXx Dogg wrote:MaxPower wrote:Friends,
Try to keep your places clean.
Clear and clean your houses both inside and out.
My problem is an area thing. Fishing village, fish market walking distance away, indiscriminate dumping, nasty neighbours.
As much as I try to keep my corner clean, and my dog also takes a fair number of them out - the unfortunate reality is that these vermin eh going anywhere. I pepper the yard with poison blocks every few months, esp when I see garbage bags being torn at the bottom.
ProtonPowder wrote:VexXx Dogg wrote:MaxPower wrote:Friends,
Try to keep your places clean.
Clear and clean your houses both inside and out.
My problem is an area thing. Fishing village, fish market walking distance away, indiscriminate dumping, nasty neighbours.
As much as I try to keep my corner clean, and my dog also takes a fair number of them out - the unfortunate reality is that these vermin eh going anywhere. I pepper the yard with poison blocks every few months, esp when I see garbage bags being torn at the bottom.
get a cat, cats are prolific hunters
supercharged turbo wrote:I'm seeing most people constructing their homes now with a steel structure first and then blocking up after.Is the steel option cheaper/better than casting your own beams?What are the advantages/disadvantages of the steel beam structure?
Saw someone advertising on fb...are these prices good?
demented wrote:Looking for recommendations for someone to clear a lot of land and backfill as required. Land is relatively flat, located behind Woodland Hindu School. Thanks.
pugboy wrote:common problem many places now
carluva wrote:I suspect that could be a genuine possibility. Why?
pugboy wrote:it could greatly reduce the soakaway percolation capability.
what you could try to do is reduce the amount of water your toilets utilize.
eg fill some small dasani water bottles with sand and water and put them in the toilet tanks to take up space.
your toilets use rubber flapper mechanism or elephant siphon?
rubber flappers can leak slightly.carluva wrote:I suspect that could be a genuine possibility. Why?
carluva wrote:Morning guys.
Any recommendations for where I can get a decent effluent pump?
The soakaway for my septic tank has crashed and I need to do a new soakaway system incorporating a separate chamber with a pump, due to the current system falling under the grade elevation of the main drains in the neighborhood.
What places can I check and are there any brands that I should consider or avoid?
carluva wrote:More like a good place to run away from.
Their prices are through the roof and probably more suitable for a commercial establishment.
I called them and it's ridiculous how expensive they are compared to other suppliers.
pugboy wrote:wonder if wasa will ever do sewer installs in the future
The septic outlet is typically 12 inches below the surface. Unless you have a commercial building on a single lot or the entire yard is paved, an effluent chamber, chlorinator and lift pump seems excessive.carluva wrote:pugboy wrote:common problem many places now
Yes it seems so.
In my case, the septic tank was constructed back in 2010 with the "old school" soakaway pit, i.e. trench with boulders and the top lined with polythene to avoid soil clogging the boulders.
In 2016, the septic tank was opened as I has to do a new cover. But with all the rainfall the last couple of years, I have no doubt that the soakway has crashed and the current soakaway is most likely an underground pool. I pumped the tank in February and then again two Fridays ago (had a leaking toilet which overfilled the septic tank after the kiddo used it). Well, with all the rainfall over the last week since pumping, I opened up the cleanout port and voila, its full once more (I intentionally did not refill with water as I wanted to see if there was leakage for myself). So this confirms that I am having back flow of excess water from the soakaway into the septic tank. The outlet line from the septic tank is also likely partially blocked as a result of this backflow which must have occurred several times.
The plan is to do an exploratory excavation to locate the outlet line from the septic tank and to establish the elevations that I have to work with. From there, it will be a new soakaway pit with an outlet to a secondary chamber where I will have the effluent pump. Unfortunately, I have to work with existing grades and do not have the elevations to spill any "purified" water from the soakaway to the community drains via a gravity flow. This sets the need for the pump. The soil type is dense clay so percolation will be very very low again driving the need for the use of the pump. The added advantage of the pump is that any water that builds up in the soakaway via rainfall can easily spill into the pump chamber from where it will be pumped out, thereby eliminating the back flow to the septic tank.
The TT standard was consulted as was a Guyanese standard (based on TT Standard). A colleague at WASA also gave me some WASA approved drawings for construction of an entire septic system, including soakaway, chlorinator, leach field etc. So the intent will be to build a new system incorporating the designs from WASA and these standards.
Question now for you out there regarding the soakaway pit. Do you think it is better to build the soakaway pit contained within a four wall underground chamber with the floor open? Or should the conventional manner of building the soakaway in a trench/pit be used? If I am building a four wall chamber, the blocks cannot be loaded nor can I leave weep holes (due to the poor percolation and definite ingress of excess ground water into the soakaway.
I will post some pics of what is going on as well as some excerpts from the drawings and standards if interested.
shake d livin wake d dead wrote:Was told that in the near future, house plans will be submitted to WASA before final approval is given. Sewer installs may not be far behind
adnj wrote:The septic outlet is typically 12 inches below the surface. Unless you have a commercial building on a single lot or the entire yard is paved, an effluent chamber, chlorinator and lift pump seems excessive.carluva wrote:pugboy wrote:common problem many places now
Yes it seems so.
In my case, the septic tank was constructed back in 2010 with the "old school" soakaway pit, i.e. trench with boulders and the top lined with polythene to avoid soil clogging the boulders.
In 2016, the septic tank was opened as I has to do a new cover. But with all the rainfall the last couple of years, I have no doubt that the soakway has crashed and the current soakaway is most likely an underground pool. I pumped the tank in February and then again two Fridays ago (had a leaking toilet which overfilled the septic tank after the kiddo used it). Well, with all the rainfall over the last week since pumping, I opened up the cleanout port and voila, its full once more (I intentionally did not refill with water as I wanted to see if there was leakage for myself). So this confirms that I am having back flow of excess water from the soakaway into the septic tank. The outlet line from the septic tank is also likely partially blocked as a result of this backflow which must have occurred several times.
The plan is to do an exploratory excavation to locate the outlet line from the septic tank and to establish the elevations that I have to work with. From there, it will be a new soakaway pit with an outlet to a secondary chamber where I will have the effluent pump. Unfortunately, I have to work with existing grades and do not have the elevations to spill any "purified" water from the soakaway to the community drains via a gravity flow. This sets the need for the pump. The soil type is dense clay so percolation will be very very low again driving the need for the use of the pump. The added advantage of the pump is that any water that builds up in the soakaway via rainfall can easily spill into the pump chamber from where it will be pumped out, thereby eliminating the back flow to the septic tank.
The TT standard was consulted as was a Guyanese standard (based on TT Standard). A colleague at WASA also gave me some WASA approved drawings for construction of an entire septic system, including soakaway, chlorinator, leach field etc. So the intent will be to build a new system incorporating the designs from WASA and these standards.
Question now for you out there regarding the soakaway pit. Do you think it is better to build the soakaway pit contained within a four wall underground chamber with the floor open? Or should the conventional manner of building the soakaway in a trench/pit be used? If I am building a four wall chamber, the blocks cannot be loaded nor can I leave weep holes (due to the poor percolation and definite ingress of excess ground water into the soakaway.
I will post some pics of what is going on as well as some excerpts from the drawings and standards if interested.
Typically a leechfield is used in lieu of a soakaway pit when the water table is high along with a backflow valve at the outlet to prevent stormwater ingress, if that's a problem.
WASA also approves leechfields.
Neither option is cheap but a leechfield will be less costly and less maintenance.shake d livin wake d dead wrote:Was told that in the near future, house plans will be submitted to WASA before final approval is given. Sewer installs may not be far behind
Don't you already need supply/waste isometrics and septic tank/sewer connection details for WASA approvals prior to permanent connection?
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