Vertical Drainage - New Way to Remove Water - Straight Down
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 6 มิ.ย. 2024
- Can we remove water with simple vertical drain? This video with Results! Watch and see!
This is called VERTICAL DRAINAGE - Best when you have a small area that floods and you cannot route the water to the street. EASY DIY LESS THAN TEN DOLLARS!
Yards with no Slope Need a Sump Pump and Catch Basins NOT a FRENCH DRAIN. Watch and Learn how this system works and Save Yourself 1000's
*ALWAYS WATCH TO THE END FOR MORE INFO*. The downspout Drain (Drain Tile) Underground Drain is the Most Important Drain in the Rainwater Drainage System. This Pipe Moves more water than any other drain .
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Don't forget about it and do it right!
Here is a complete guide. Everything you need to know. How it works, and So many more tips. Only here on Apple Drain. We Do It Everyday!
www.AppleDrains.com/florida LIVE HELP - check website for times and details.
Hosted by Chuck
Great Video for the DIY, Step by Step
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On your recommendation and with your design we installed a vertical drain behind our garage. It cleared up all of our floodimg issues! Thank you, Chuck!
Great news!
This has transformed our side yard. Usually It stayed wet for days after a hard rain. Now a day later it's dry enough to mow
Wow! This is a great project
Did you put those drain tops on the top or just backfill with the sod? Great idea
I put a drain cap on the place that was in the center of the wet area. Roughly a twenty five foot square area. Then the other four I used the sod. I just mowed today after having heavy rain yesterday. Its important to dig below the clay layer
yea, im definitely using this in the backyard. could use about 4-5 of them in various low spots...thanks big chuck you da man
Thanks for the great idea, I have clay it is a pain . In my garden I have a problem with drainage due to many factors . I used your idea and the water drained out faster then ever before, thank you.
So happy to help
We have clay as well. How far down did you have to go to get past the clay?
I went down 30", so far so good
Glad you commented. I was wondering if it would be effective with the clay soil here in Tennessee.
@@jdcapps21
👍
Looking forward to trying this in my yard in Connecticut. Thanks for this.
Our pleasure!
I'm going to try this around spots I have already done to help it more. Thank you Chuck!!
Glad to help
Very good demo. Thanks.
Thanks so much
Water finds the path of least resistance. Nice way to speed up the ground recharge process. I like to finish a drain system with a pop up or grate attached to a shallow vertical drain.
Chuck is the mvp
We have just had this done in our back garden. 70 holes dug to 2ft depth and already the grass feels better 👌
Nice work!
@@appledrains One day in and what a difference! All of the mushy grass and mud has gone and we can actually walk on it now without getting wet feet! We just filled the holes with membrane and gravel rather than using a pipe.
Thank you so much! I've been battling a spot on the sidewalk in my backyard where a ton of water wants to pool up, making it unusable. I installed one of these bad boys right next to the sidewalk and all of the water runs right into it. I can use my sidewalk again during and after heavy rainfall! Problem solved!
Great drainage videos! I saw a few where you just put the sod back on over the vertical hole and others had those caps. Which way do you think is better? Thank you
Thank you for the knowledge share!
You’re welcome!
I did this to my French drains and now my yard is draining much better in the bad spots. I didn't put cloth or a pipe. Just a hole and gravel. I used my Harbor Freight auger and had both done in less than 15 minutes.
I hope to do this in a gravel driveway, we have about 3 muddy swimming pools before we get to our bridge to the highway, if I use a metal perforated pipe and metal drain cover I wonder if this would work? The mud holes take over a week to dry out here
Great video man. I imagine some people's hard layer is like really deep though, yeah?
Would it help to make the straight down even much bigger if you have a much bigger area/ water coming? I mean like e.g. 5ft x 5ft, filling it up with gravel?
Hi Apple Drains, I have a barrel with a sump pump on the side of my house. Could I remove the pump and fill the barrel with gravel and get the same result? Thank you so much.
Hi Chuck. Recently subscribed to your channel and thank you for your research and educational videos. I am in NY and and I have two vertical drains in my driveway and they are right in front of garage doors. The vertical drains are slotted. The garage is lower than the street level.
Two questions hoping you can answer.
1. Is there a way to pitch the rain water away from the house. I see old termite damage around the garage frame. My thoughts is the moisture build up via the vertical drain makes it an attractive home for subterranean insects. Could the vertical drain be angled 45 degrees away from the house? It will create 2 feet distance away from the house.
2. My second question is...during heavy heavy rain, one of the vertical drainage puddles while other (8 feet away) does not puddle. Eventually the impacted vertical drainage will clear on its own. What should I try to clear the drainage before I start digging up concrete.
Again, really appreciate you creating these educational content.
May 17th we rented a gas powered post hole digger (Dirt Dawg?) with a 16" auger. I precut 15 round sod pieces around the perimeter of our septic field: 10 close to the house and the septic tank, in line with the fingers, and 5 on the other side of the septic field, then augured down as far as it would go. Ended up with holes that were between 28" and 32" deep. Lined most of them with Geotextile material and #8 stone...2 tons just about filled them all. Put the sod back in place.
12 days later (last night) we get a torrential downpour, which would typically get our toilets gurgling. (The water table in the yard was the issue...not providing enough runoff to keep the septic tank from flooding and backing up in to the house!) NO GURGLES TODAY!! The final test will be later next week, as we expect 4 days of rain here in Indiana.
SO...THANK YOU for this awesome idea!! My backup plan was to trench out along the same line as the holes we dug, if the vertical drain holes didn't work well enough. Seems to be doing the job of keeping the water table below the septic.
Side note: I suggested adding standard french drains around the perimeter to one of the septic replacement companies and they said, "It won't work." But then they turned around and told us that they install french drains when they put in a new septic system. REALLY??!! It's disheartening to see companies still fighting for their bottom line and not advocating for the best and most affordable suggestions for their customers. I would have been more likely to hire them for future jobs had they not been so quick to recommend the $40,000 MOUND SYSTEM to replace our 50+ year old septic. Keeps chugging along!!
Did you not wrap anything with landscaping fabric?
I’m in southeast Texas. I installed a vertical drain a week before we received almost 3 inches of rain . If there ever was a test, that was it. There was standing water for about 8 hours after the rain, however, it did dissipate and was completely dry by the next day. Not standing for 2 or 3 days like before. I call it a success. I plan on adding another one like this. Might even go with the 8 inch NDS pipe.
Houston?
@@hyster2568 east of Houston, bout 90 miles.
how far down did you have to go for hardpan? I am wanting to add one here in the dallas area not sure how deep to go?
@@joshuadannel6395 down here in Southeast Texas. We have a lot of clay. I went down roughly 25 inches to be safe. I would say the deeper the better.
Would this work near the home? I have some water that stagnates near the house.
Is it this the same as a dry well? I thought those didn’t work?
I'm in East Tennessee and have this problem in my yard so bad just outside the front of my house that my house actually floods in heavy rain 😫 2 ft. down is solid rock. do you think this would still work?
how can you have drainage problems with a foot of sand below your lawn?
Will pea gravel work? I have gallons of it.
I tried this in my yard, but I have deep clay. The first 16” is good soil, but then clay. I dug down 5’ and it’s still clay.
Will vertical drainage work in my situation? Thanks
I have two questions which one would be betterDrainage Trench Wrap Soil Separator vs Drainage Filter Sock to keep dirt from getting into the pipe?
I am still trying to understand how to locate the hard pan can I get help with this please?
Do you have soil or sand in your yard?
I may need to try this in my driveway. The center strip is mostly moss due to poor drainage.
Chuck! I need ya help! I did the process, I dug down 2ft and it worked good for a few rains but now its backing up with water. I pulled all the gravel and dug an extra ft (3ft total) i have a clear vision of bottom of hole and slowly but surely, water is coming up from bottom of hole. Man idk what to do now. Any suggestions?
Lots of sand in that demo. Where was this shot? Looks like a good idea for a problem area that is not too extensive. Thanks.
I have two places close to my house foundation where the water pools with a hard rain. Can I put in a vertical drain if it is about 4-6 feet from the house?
It will help
How far away from your house's foundation should you keep away so the water doesn't flow under and come back up under the house in the crawl space. We have clay soil, will it work in that. Your soil looked like sand. Could you use a gasoline auger to dig down about 3 feet x 8". Thanks
Power auger will work good
very good idea, do you think this will work on Texas clay?
This idea does NOT work for clay around the Catawba river in the Charlotte, NC area.
I tested by digging a hole 16” deep by 10” wide, then filled it with water from a hose. After 12 hours, only 4” of water was gone. And there was no significant rain around this time either. So, with the ground relatively dry, the water going directly in the hole from the hose stayed there for over 24 hrs.
I had the option to pipe the water down hill, so I went with that.
Not surprised you had to fix a yard with baughman tile. Need it done right call Chuck
After watching your video on vertical drains I put 3 on the side of my house where it usually stays wet, and lo and behold the water was gone and I was able to mow my grass without any ruts. Thanks
Oh yeah, it cost a little more than $10.00, drainage rock goes for $6.00 a bag and I needed a bag and a half per hole, but it works great, Thanks again.
Did you put drainage covers at grass level or just put the sod back over the spot? Thanks
@@johnmichael7331 just put the sod back
@@johnmichael7331 just put the sod back
I THINK I SAW HIM DO IT BOTH WAYS BUT JUST THE DRAINAGE COVER WORKED BEST.@@johnmichael7331
I live in East Texas where we have sandyloam. What you show in this video is basically very sandy soil with a very short distance to a "hard pan" as you call it. Well, it's not the case in my area. Sandy loam is nasty after rain and the top surface can reach up to and above 3 feet. I gave it a try in one area and I was about 3.5 feet down. Did I notice any difference? Let's put it this way: the water was not receding any faster (at least through my perception) than before. This tells me that the "hard pan" was even lower than my 3.5 feet. At this point, I think, going horizontal with a pipe to the nearest outlet is probably a better solution due to the diminished results of "vertical" drainage.
Would it work if you drilled a 2 ft deep hole with a 6 or 12 inch diameter auger and just filled the hole with gravel without a pipe?
It will help
Where does the water go/? i have standing water next to the house will doing this drain the water into de crawlspace?
This water goes into the earth. The idea is to tunnel through the layer of soil which doesn't absorb water very well, and drain into deeper soil which DOES absorb water well. The effectiveness of a vertical drain depends entirely on what the soil is like where the drain is created, so there's no way to know if it will work until you try.
Note: even if you don't penetrate the top soil, just having a hole with gravel will increase the surface area of soil which is exposed to water, thus making more water absorb into the soil than before. But it's still impossibly to know what will happen until you do it.
Hey Chuck, do you think a couple of these on a negative grade yard towards the house will do good during an event rainfall?
Don’t think so
Better is the French drain bring gravel to grade
@@appledrains Thanks Chuck! Looks like I have a large project ahead of me.
@@ARKujo you can do it!!!
👍
My yard don’t have soil like this, mine is mostly clay. I installed 4 of these without the pipe,, just used landscaping cloth and drainage rock, had to go close to 36” deep. It takes about a day to drain where without it took 2-3 days to drain. Do you think it would drain better with the perforated pipe?
Yes
I live in PA how would I know my depth of the hard pan
Could be at any depth.. it’s very hard soil.
Hello, i did that but dug 4' deep in northern Indiana. Water is currently sitting in the hole I dug. Im having a hard time finding a solution for my sump pump discharge due to alot of water sitting in the back yard.
If you have good pump, you could send much farther away..
I love it 😂, "... Home Da-pot..."
I grew up in Europe..
I’m in the early stages of putting in a drain around the footing of my foundation as the water table is coming up through a hole in my basement. I’m curious if I have to fill the trench 6’ deep all the way to the surface with stone or can I back fill with soil. Again I’m not trying to collect surface water. I’m trying to divert the water table. Any advice is much appreciated.
I am thinking of using geo fabric and perforated piping all the way to the storm drain in my driveway. I’m going to tie in where the gutters meet the storm drain.
The more gravel the better
A footing drain collects ground water, so no you don't need gravel from top to bottom if you don't want.
I tried this in my houston back yard. I dug 5 feet down and couldnt get past the clay :(
Good idea but very dependent on soil types and layer depths in your particular yard.
Maxed out my post hole digger in Houston clay (maybe 4 or 5' deep). Can't get deep enough. Hole holds water and doesn't drain. Got to take it to the street.
Yup I live in Houston aswell
I had the same issue. I was excited to try vertical drainage, but I couldn't get past the clay at 5' deep. I'm thinking of just making a few deep holes like that filled with gravel and see where it goes. I spread woodchips around the swampy areas for now and that's much better though hopefully temporary
Could you use EZ Drain on vertical drian?
I believe so! Just a wider hole
Thank you
Does this create a mosquito nest
Has anyone tried this in the Midwest where we don't have sandy soil? "Ours is more clay"
Does this work in a heavy clay yard?
It will help
@@appledrains thank you
@@appledrains what kind of specific rock should I use? From say Home Depot or Lowe’s?
Just curious, does using this technique raise the possibility of sinkholes?
Not in the least
lol I wondered the same.
What the heck is the ground made of there??? It looks like a lot of ash is coming out.... I know it isn't... but all that grey matter is weird!
I have huge problem with water . The property i bought. Is very wet . And there is farm land and orchards behind me that is higher and drain naturally into my property. If i am going to fix it i will have to dig 10 feet at least and shuve 4 10 feet culverts vertically with wholes in them the diameter of each one should be at least 1foot and half or more . And pray it works . I have alot of standind water . At times it looks like a freaking spring .
Good luck with your project
@@appledrains any advice? Or am I crazy for wanting to go extreme?
Yeah, a few minutes to do if you have sandy soil; not here in Southern NY where we have rocky clay…
I hope you give it a try! It will help!
Thanks Chuck. May give it a try sometime. It’s an interesting method of dealing with wet spots… Thank you!
How is this a new way? My dad has had a vertical drain in his backyard for over 20 years.
UFC should have chuck vs fdm
Does not work in my Chicago yard with clay.
Did you try it or just thinking it won’t work? Give it a try!
Tried it. Dug several holes, 4 feet deep. Filled with water quickly, but never percolated. Th e sandy white stuff you have in your desert lawn is quite different than the moist black loam we have over our very dense clay.
Sounds like your hard pan may be deeper.
But thanks for sharing
Irrelevant to this video….. but if I do a backyard with catch basins (12x12)
How many of them can I connect to the same pipe to an exit way?
Like every 15 feet I have one catch basin connecting to another… then all exiting at the back of a yard through a pop up
Sounds good!
@@appledrains okay thank you. I didn’t know if there was a rule about doing that and all. Thanks for the reply boss!
Thats what my colon looks like. I'm all backed up and i just need some vertical drainage to get past the hard pan 😂