Great video! As a drainage engineer I thought I would add a couple of comments. You’re correct with the 5m rule with regards to building regs, but I would add two points. 1. This should also apply with 5m to the boundary as a courtesy to any neighbours. You hit sand so in your case i would hope it’s not critical, but the fact you had gravel disappearing on the old soakaway does make me wonder if there is some dissolution going on?! . If anyone reading this is on chalks, notably low density chalks, I’ve had sites where the geotechnical engineer has required 20m from foundations/roads/boundarys! It’s worth noting soakaways only work where the soil conditions are suitable, if your in London clay for example there’s no real chance they’ll work. Like you say, you can check with a drainage (civil) engineer - another cheaper option is to check planning applications in your area, big sites will often have full drainage strategies which should have onsite soak away testing which will confirm its viable.
@@RagnBoneBrown On the face of it 2.5m makes sense, and ive seen some guidance from certain councils noting this, and other which don't even mention the boundary easement at all, but should a neighbour extend their property in the future this can lead to foundations within the 5m easment (and as I've said, 5m is a minimum and could be more subject to consultation with geotechnical engineer). Therefore the 5m easement to the site boundary is best practise and from my experience the Lead Local Flood Authorities who review planning applications (normally above a certain size) within each local authority will only accept 5m as a result. I dont want to come across critical as your in a retrofit situation where you've clearly improved what was there and what functioned reasonable well for a number of decades. Standards are always progressing, and with a lot of home projects its completely impracticable to bring everything in line with modern best practise, but I thought my comments could be something to consider if a fellow viewer was looking to do something similar.
@@sirhoggit this is pretty much why new houses and refurbs are unaffordable. Constantly increasing compliance costs. From experience I have taken on local authority housing where new doors have been cut into supporting walls without lintels causing no end of roof problems, driveway drain covers have been replaced with a15 rated covers as they were cheaper. Fence posts put through shared rainwater drains Please can local authority get it's own house in order before making life more difficult for those that do know what they are doing.
@@sirhoggit I really appreciated your insight here. I think that as you say given the existing situation they did the best they can, but I think it also highlights where if you clearly have some existing subsidance I would never want to chance it and do a DIY job. It surely wouldnt cost the earth to get an engineer to give it a once over and you could still do the work yourself after that.
I continue to find it fascinating to see how things are done in the UK as opposed to here in the USA. A bonus is seeing it done by someone who knows what they’re doing. Give the cats a neck scratch for me.
@@drahcir6590 They did a great job and it will perform perfectly. Small details: I only use the black non woven geotextile fabric more durable long term and tie the cloth to the pipe with stainless clamp, overlap and staple. Deeper silt trap? If I could find one or make one. Again, everyone has their way of doing things. This is 1k times better then the previous with only stone. We once had an old house that had cisterns and a well pump. They held water and released water yet served two purposes for collecting roof water.
Our drainage soakaway was blocked, so we needed to dig a new one to replace it. This was the hardest day's work I've ever done in my life!!! The Aiden Project www.youtube.com/@THE-AIDEN-PROJECT Aiden's 'behind the scenese' video: th-cam.com/video/kxrNNQrUrEM/w-d-xo.htmlsi=69z1LFqLK_VGnnVF My Patio Video: th-cam.com/video/5TSPucirYuU/w-d-xo.html My Slabs On A Budget Video: th-cam.com/video/NcHHzyUdSpA/w-d-xo.html 🔨 MY TOOLS 🔨 For links to the tools I use, plus some of my favourite consumables, finishes and more see links below. As an Amazon Associate I may earn from qualifying purchases. UK affiliate store: www.amazon.co.uk/shop/ragnbonebrown US affiliate store: www.amazon.com/shop/ragnbonebrown 🤝 HELP SUPPORT THE CHANNEL 🤝 Support with TH-cam channel membership: th-cam.com/channels/VyE_6jEtVZGmYGXtUOL5FQ.htmljoin Support with Patreon: www.patreon.com/ragnbonebrown Support with PayPal paypal.me/ragnbonebrown Shop With Amazon using my affiliate link: geni.us/iWD3K 💰 SHOP 💰 Etsy: www.etsy.com/uk/shop/KeithBrownMaker teespring.com/stores/rag-n-bone-brown-merch 🎧 WORKSHOP BANTER PODCAST 🎧 th-cam.com/users/workshopbanter Also available on Spotify, Apple, Google and most other podcast platforms 🔗 LINKS: 🔗 Website: www.ragnbonebrown.com Facebook: facebook.com/ragnbonebrown Instagram: @ragnbonebrown Twitter: twitter.com/ragnbonebrown Email: ragnbonebrown@gmail.com Second TH-cam Channel (non woodwork videos): th-cam.com/users/keefykeef
A follow-up video in a few years time would be useful to report on any issues that might crop up. I'm thinking settling of the gravel over such a large area might cause problems for any pavers laid above.
I really appreciate the measurements you included with this video, the depth, pipe depth, coverage depth on top etc. I'm too going to be tackling this job in the near future also and of all the soakaway videos I have watched in the past few months, they all skim over the actual measurements needed. Great job there.
Nice work, it definitely looked like hard graft. And well supervised by Mickey and Hazel, much to the utter delight of my seven year-old daughter! Good on Aiden for helping out too.
Great job, well done. Just done similar for granddaughter, but am ‘Billy NoMates’ so did it on my own, with pick and shovel! Regrettably met shillet, not soft sand, so tough job at age 74. But certainly got a sense of satisfaction when shovelling last bit of top soil over the crates. Needless to say took more than one day. Just hope it works! Look forward to more of your projects.
What a day! I was really interested in this one as we also have a problem with water, in our case coming from a neighbouring property, down a slope, but honestly Keith I don’t think we could manage it ourselves and after seeing your slog, I now don’t think we’ll try. Really impressed with your solution. Great video.👏🏼🌟
Thanks Mandy. We have a similar issue here, we have the lowest house on the street and lower than the road too so we seem to get everyone else's water! 🤣 really should have considered that when we bought the place but one of those things that you don't know until you know...
Great job Keith. Had to do something similar. I had to move a 2000 litre tank for the rain water and connect it to something similar to your crates. In my case it was a tunnel made in a way that once placed underground you could drive a car over it. Very sturdy construction and quite smart considering it was made from plastic. Had to dig out a channel 1.5m deep 80cm wide and 14 meters long for that tunnel. 6 tons of gravel went on the bottom, same as you used the fabric to coat the gravel and the tunnel. On top of the gravel the tunnel was placed (the tunnel itself can hold 2000 liters of rain water) and on top of that 50cm of soil. Had a digger to dig everything up and it was a big one lol. However the gravel and then moving the mountain of soil was done by me and some help from my dad. It was bloody hard work so I know exactly how you felt. Good job mate.
Love it ! I have a mate for doing that, no machines required ! the problem is to stop him digging, he seems to like it ! The crate thing works, but is no better in function than a properly constructed soak-away , just lots quicker.
Thanks. I had to dig out and reconnect an old rubble soakaway which has the rain from 4 small houses going into it. Too much water and when the soakaway pipe had blocked (before we purchased our house) it had been replaced with a surface pipe. We are now in the process of having downpipes fitted for each house (as I think is legally required) but I also added in a Rainus filter system that in theory catches the laves and moss . It was surprisingly expensive (£116), pretty poorly made (tried to get a replacement but the vendor from Wales didn't even bother to reply to our email and text . It will be interesting to see if if makes a difference and my guess is I will be digging a smaller holes for a few soakaway crates in the spring.
Glad You got it done , surprised you did it in 1day. You chose about hottest time of year Todo it !! Great having Aiden's assistance/direction.grwat fun using digger ...😊😅.
Great video and a really interesting project. Not one I will need to take undertake where I am due to the massive balancing pond in the park opposite which handles all our storm water, but my mother's soakaway will need attention soon and I'll be sure to find a contractor for that! Coincidentally I was watching Aiden's french drain videos last night - great channel as you say.
Did some serious earthworks a few months ago while terracing a portion of garden, a friend advised on hiring a power barrow on day two and my god, was that good advice!!
Great job the two of you did and well done to you for all that barrowing of soil and gravel, it was exhausting just watching! Thanks for the glimpses of the cats, too!
Really enjoyable Keith. It's great when you know someone who knows what they are doing. Looks like your cats were exhausted watching. I bet you were aching the day after. 👍Tony
Seriously what is going on?! Everything you upload is always 3 months ahead of what I'm planning 😂 this has been very useful as a hints & tips/do's n don'ts by using you as my Guinea pig
Good day of work! The results will be good for more than a decade I reckon. I don't know if the UK has these style of automatic leaf "sieves" or if you have any trees putting any amount of leafs on your roof (and into the pipes) buy searching for 🇸🇪 "självrens lövsil" will get you pictures of what they are. Very nice to have, it's a one time job to fit and you never run the risk of clogged pipes. Extra security for vacation houses or similar when you don't visit during long periods.
This was a really good watch Keith. I did this on my parents bungalow about 15 years ago, the original soakaway being about 1.2 meters from the property and woefully undersized. I didnt know about those types of crates back then so had loads of large stone delivered. But the process was the same, using the membrane etc. so it was nice to have confirmation of what I have done was right. The room in the corner of the bungalow was so damp but soon dried out so it was definitely worth doing.
Interesting project! I did something similar last year.....should have done a video.... I put in a 50 gallon drum and a sump pump and I now pump the water out to the street. This would mean that your soakaway would last forever!
That was very enjoyable to watch and your honesty will, I’m sure, aid others considering tackling such a job themselves. You both did a great job which will benefit your home over the years. Stay are x
where would you get those big blue containers you used? need to do a bit of landscaping myself and i've got a huge amount of decorative stone to remove and figured putting into those containers would be best!
Hi Keith, you should of hired small tracked wheel barrow - we’ve used them on a few jobs (filling skips etc) and they are perfect compliment to 1/2T mini digger - each bucket takes equivalent of 5 wheelbarrows
in the middle of doing a similar job myself, only theres no access to the back at all, so what has taken you a day has taken me around 2 weeks, im using a matock and a shovel for a 2x2m soakaway. back breaking work
Jolly good job. Before plastic crates were the norm i built a soakaway , bought some manhole rings and a cover set two door lintels across the base to rest the rings on lined the sides of the hole with plastic sheeting and backfilled with large rocks and added a manhole cover. Jobs a goodun 20 years later and i can still go down the manhole and clear our silt of which there is very little. I do like the idea of having access to inspect and desilt.
I've done mini versions using old milk - crates - work like a charm. I wrapped them in permeable membrane and connected via orange piping - so quite good to come on here and see I actually guessed it all fairly correctly.
Superb and hard job. You looked tired at the end of the video, we understand. Super entertaining video as always. I’ve been watching you the last five years, or more, from Spain. Cheers from the sunny south.
Hi Keith. No doubtvat all, mate, that was a blockbuster project! Sometimes , we wonder how we ever do these jobs. In your case, you did it , with no real need to have that particular battle ever again! Well done. Don
Hi, great video. Can you tell me how you came to decide 10mm gravel and not larger? Why is this best for this application? Many thanks 😊 really enjoyed watching, ta. 👍
I appreciate you admitting your incompetence with the digger and calling in Someone who knew what to do the amount of people who think it’s easy and hurt themselves I know a fella who thought it was easy having never driven a digger before he rented a 2t digger to do the job of a 12t and rolled the digger twice before hiring us in
Started my working life at 13 as a groundworker. Absolutely loved it... but, it is literally the hardest work you could ever do. My spine was shot to bits by the time I was 27 though. Retrained as a surveyor. Much, much easier. 😂
I think it was when you stared cementing the drains in that I had a 'flashback-ish' moment to scenes of a chap in a little shed at the bottom of his garden. Boy how things have come on since then, eh Keith? A super video of; tough work, someone has to do it, and releif & satisfaction in a vital job, well done. 💯my friend. (And cheers to Aiden for his TH-cam camaraderie - I must pop over and see what he's made of this project)
It's called a Hopper because that's what it is. A Funnel shaped guide to catch whatever, could be coal, sand, flour, water, and the like and direct it into a vessel or tank or receptacle below.
I wonder if just replacing the slabs with a gravel or partial gravel patio would have worked given that your soil seemed rather sandy. Great job anyway and hard work too!
Great video. Our house was extended at some point, so the soakaway is only now maybe only 1.5m from the back of the house. No idea why the didnt move it, discovered it when the insurers sent someone round to deal with a blockage in the pipe that leads to the soakaway! Need it moving but like you, our grass area of the garden is raised so can probably only move it another 1m before we reach that. Was going to attempt it myself, think I'll hire someone in!
That was a great video, you certainly could have used another lad to help (but I find that unless you’re doing it at the weekend lads are usually in short supply) cost wise without the 20 man hours @£50 per hour labour charge your parts costs were brilliant and I’m in no doubt that job would have been around £3k from a contractor as no one seems to want to come out for less these days! Thanks for sharing buddy!
That was a lot of work for one day, well done Keith, and how great that Aiden came over to help you out - top bloke, and a great channel too ! I can't believe what beautiful sand you had there just a few feet down, what a handy resource, you could have your own quarry - you'll be alright for a sand pit for baby Brown ! I have been considering doing one of these myself, but I think I should have done it years ago before all our tress got established as I think the roots would make it a nightmare !
So a soakaway is where you dig deep enough to find sand in the ground? Then you place crates or gravel over sand covered by a membrane, then channel rainwater ftom gutters to soakaway location?
Great video! As a drainage engineer I thought I would add a couple of comments. You’re correct with the 5m rule with regards to building regs, but I would add two points. 1. This should also apply with 5m to the boundary as a courtesy to any neighbours. You hit sand so in your case i would hope it’s not critical, but the fact you had gravel disappearing on the old soakaway does make me wonder if there is some dissolution going on?! . If anyone reading this is on chalks, notably low density chalks, I’ve had sites where the geotechnical engineer has required 20m from foundations/roads/boundarys!
It’s worth noting soakaways only work where the soil conditions are suitable, if your in London clay for example there’s no real chance they’ll work.
Like you say, you can check with a drainage (civil) engineer - another cheaper option is to check planning applications in your area, big sites will often have full drainage strategies which should have onsite soak away testing which will confirm its viable.
I'm pretty sure it's not 5m to a boundary. From memory it was 2.5m?
@@RagnBoneBrown On the face of it 2.5m makes sense, and ive seen some guidance from certain councils noting this, and other which don't even mention the boundary easement at all, but should a neighbour extend their property in the future this can lead to foundations within the 5m easment (and as I've said, 5m is a minimum and could be more subject to consultation with geotechnical engineer). Therefore the 5m easement to the site boundary is best practise and from my experience the Lead Local Flood Authorities who review planning applications (normally above a certain size) within each local authority will only accept 5m as a result.
I dont want to come across critical as your in a retrofit situation where you've clearly improved what was there and what functioned reasonable well for a number of decades. Standards are always progressing, and with a lot of home projects its completely impracticable to bring everything in line with modern best practise, but I thought my comments could be something to consider if a fellow viewer was looking to do something similar.
@@sirhoggit this is pretty much why new houses and refurbs are unaffordable. Constantly increasing compliance costs.
From experience I have taken on local authority housing where new doors have been cut into supporting walls without lintels causing no end of roof problems, driveway drain covers have been replaced with a15 rated covers as they were cheaper. Fence posts put through shared rainwater drains
Please can local authority get it's own house in order before making life more difficult for those that do know what they are doing.
@@sirhoggit I really appreciated your insight here. I think that as you say given the existing situation they did the best they can, but I think it also highlights where if you clearly have some existing subsidance I would never want to chance it and do a DIY job. It surely wouldnt cost the earth to get an engineer to give it a once over and you could still do the work yourself after that.
He needed a soak away and did a neat job well done doing it your self and not hiring any company to do it for you , you saved a mint
I continue to find it fascinating to see how things are done in the UK as opposed to here in the USA. A bonus is seeing it done by someone who knows what they’re doing. Give the cats a neck scratch for me.
In what way would you do it differently?
@@drahcir6590 They did a great job and it will perform perfectly. Small details: I only use the black non woven geotextile fabric more durable long term and tie the cloth to the pipe with stainless clamp, overlap and staple. Deeper silt trap? If I could find one or make one. Again, everyone has their way of doing things. This is 1k times better then the previous with only stone. We once had an old house that had cisterns and a well pump. They held water and released water yet served two purposes for collecting roof water.
Our drainage soakaway was blocked, so we needed to dig a new one to replace it. This was the hardest day's work I've ever done in my life!!!
The Aiden Project www.youtube.com/@THE-AIDEN-PROJECT
Aiden's 'behind the scenese' video: th-cam.com/video/kxrNNQrUrEM/w-d-xo.htmlsi=69z1LFqLK_VGnnVF
My Patio Video: th-cam.com/video/5TSPucirYuU/w-d-xo.html
My Slabs On A Budget Video: th-cam.com/video/NcHHzyUdSpA/w-d-xo.html
🔨 MY TOOLS 🔨
For links to the tools I use, plus some of my favourite consumables, finishes and more see links below. As an Amazon Associate I may earn from qualifying purchases.
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Great job ❤ Before you get rid of that free sand, if you got lawn it might be a good top dressing ( or whatever gardeners call it )
A follow-up video in a few years time would be useful to report on any issues that might crop up.
I'm thinking settling of the gravel over such a large area might cause problems for any pavers laid above.
I really appreciate the measurements you included with this video, the depth, pipe depth, coverage depth on top etc.
I'm too going to be tackling this job in the near future also and of all the soakaway videos I have watched in the past few months, they all skim over the actual measurements needed.
Great job there.
Glad it was helpful!
Most people say you shouldn't use washing up liquid as a pipe lubricant. It supposedly rots the seals. Use proper pipe lubricant
A percolation test would be a prudent move to establish whether the ground is suitable for draining into .
They were on sand!
Brilliant - we have just moved into a bungalow with downspouts running into tubs!!!! now I have a plan 👍
Nice work, it definitely looked like hard graft. And well supervised by Mickey and Hazel, much to the utter delight of my seven year-old daughter! Good on Aiden for helping out too.
Moving earth is always so much more demanding than anticipated! Another really interesting project, well done Keith and Aiden 👏
Great job, well done. Just done similar for granddaughter, but am ‘Billy NoMates’ so did it on my own, with pick and shovel! Regrettably met shillet, not soft sand, so tough job at age 74. But certainly got a sense of satisfaction when shovelling last bit of top soil over the crates. Needless to say took more than one day. Just hope it works! Look forward to more of your projects.
Nice work!
What a day! I was really interested in this one as we also have a problem with water, in our case coming from a neighbouring property, down a slope, but honestly Keith I don’t think we could manage it ourselves and after seeing your slog, I now don’t think we’ll try. Really impressed with your solution. Great video.👏🏼🌟
Thanks Mandy. We have a similar issue here, we have the lowest house on the street and lower than the road too so we seem to get everyone else's water! 🤣 really should have considered that when we bought the place but one of those things that you don't know until you know...
Great job Keith. Had to do something similar. I had to move a 2000 litre tank for the rain water and connect it to something similar to your crates. In my case it was a tunnel made in a way that once placed underground you could drive a car over it. Very sturdy construction and quite smart considering it was made from plastic. Had to dig out a channel 1.5m deep 80cm wide and 14 meters long for that tunnel. 6 tons of gravel went on the bottom, same as you used the fabric to coat the gravel and the tunnel. On top of the gravel the tunnel was placed (the tunnel itself can hold 2000 liters of rain water) and on top of that 50cm of soil. Had a digger to dig everything up and it was a big one lol. However the gravel and then moving the mountain of soil was done by me and some help from my dad. It was bloody hard work so I know exactly how you felt. Good job mate.
That’s one large soak away ! , great job and it’s nice to see people take pride in their DIY projects
I wish I could afford that number plate 😂 had an awesome day playing with the digger 🙌
Aiden is a good guy to know. Came up with some good ideas. Good teamwork guys.
Fantastic work, well edited and produced video. Very informative. Thank you
Love it ! I have a mate for doing that, no machines required ! the problem is to stop him digging, he seems to like it !
The crate thing works, but is no better in function than a properly constructed soak-away , just lots quicker.
Aiden is epic. Best crossover
Thanks. I had to dig out and reconnect an old rubble soakaway which has the rain from 4 small houses going into it. Too much water and when the soakaway pipe had blocked (before we purchased our house) it had been replaced with a surface pipe. We are now in the process of having downpipes fitted for each house (as I think is legally required) but I also added in a Rainus filter system that in theory catches the laves and moss . It was surprisingly expensive (£116), pretty poorly made (tried to get a replacement but the vendor from Wales didn't even bother to reply to our email and text . It will be interesting to see if if makes a difference and my guess is I will be digging a smaller holes for a few soakaway crates in the spring.
That was good value and all that lovely sand too.
Glad You got it done , surprised you did it in 1day. You chose about hottest time of year Todo it !! Great having Aiden's assistance/direction.grwat fun using digger ...😊😅.
Really interesting watching this project from start to finish
Thanks
Wow for a diyer you have all best tools, more tools then a trade man
Brilliant well done hard graft but very worth it.
Your work is extremely good! I have learnt soo much, thank you.
Great job. Good of Aiden to help - he has a great channel.
Watched Aiden's video last night. Needless to say I have both o ye on tap. Deffo a back breaker. Nice to have help. Take care & stay safe.
I can’t understand why you’re video Channel has not got more people viewing you always give clear advice and your friend Aiden keep them coming 😊👍👏👏
Nice to see a proper job done
Great job! I’m installing some French drains soon so kind of a mini version of this!
This was a really useful tutorial, full of the information needed to do the job properly. Nice one matey.
Great video and a really interesting project. Not one I will need to take undertake where I am due to the massive balancing pond in the park opposite which handles all our storm water, but my mother's soakaway will need attention soon and I'll be sure to find a contractor for that! Coincidentally I was watching Aiden's french drain videos last night - great channel as you say.
Cheers Karl 👌
a job im looking to do myself. hopper is an inverted cone type shape to aid the flow of material.
Exhausted just looking you do it. Well done
Did some serious earthworks a few months ago while terracing a portion of garden, a friend advised on hiring a power barrow on day two and my god, was that good advice!!
Great job the two of you did and well done to you for all that barrowing of soil and gravel, it was exhausting just watching! Thanks for the glimpses of the cats, too!
Well done!! to calculate the size of a soak-away, you need to know the hydraulic conductivity of the soil. You hit sand; so you are OK!!
Well-done bud - really, really impressive!
I'm just wondering whether the whole pipe drainage system could have been led into the street ? What the gradient from front of house to back ?
Really enjoyable Keith. It's great when you know someone who knows what they are doing. Looks like your cats were exhausted watching. I bet you were aching the day after. 👍Tony
Hard work there Keith, come in handy that mini JCB and help from Aiden. You have done an amazing job mate well done👍
Brilliant video gents, really enjoyed it. I was shattered just watching 😂😂
Cheers Leo
Seriously what is going on?! Everything you upload is always 3 months ahead of what I'm planning 😂 this has been very useful as a hints & tips/do's n don'ts by using you as my Guinea pig
You are buying lottery tickets while this is going on of course?
@@stevebettany8778😂
YT algorithm 😉 👍
😂 'I love it when a plan comes together'
Wait till he burns the gaff down 😂
Good day of work! The results will be good for more than a decade I reckon.
I don't know if the UK has these style of automatic leaf "sieves" or if you have any trees putting any amount of leafs on your roof (and into the pipes) buy searching for 🇸🇪 "självrens lövsil" will get you pictures of what they are. Very nice to have, it's a one time job to fit and you never run the risk of clogged pipes. Extra security for vacation houses or similar when you don't visit during long periods.
Brilliant job and great video
Nice work guys Thanks for sharing the video with us!💖😎👍JP
Great work!!!
This was a really good watch Keith. I did this on my parents bungalow about 15 years ago, the original soakaway being about 1.2 meters from the property and woefully undersized. I didnt know about those types of crates back then so had loads of large stone delivered. But the process was the same, using the membrane etc. so it was nice to have confirmation of what I have done was right. The room in the corner of the bungalow was so damp but soon dried out so it was definitely worth doing.
Keith aiden, go to Library ,construction drainage. You've just wasted time money all that hard graft, when the solution is a part of the house.
Wow Keith, that was a very intimidating project, well done!
Interesting project! I did something similar last year.....should have done a video.... I put in a 50 gallon drum and a sump pump and I now pump the water out to the street. This would mean that your soakaway would last forever!
One day ! You guys rock !
Good job chaps. Another great video.
Fantastic, Keith! You guys killed it! Really well done! 😃
Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
Thank you!
That was very enjoyable to watch and your honesty will, I’m sure, aid others considering tackling such a job themselves. You both did a great job which will benefit your home over the years. Stay are x
A Great Job well done !
Very informative.
I enjoy your videos so much every time I see you have posted a new one I am chuffed haha, amazing job yet again cheers Keith 👍🏼
where would you get those big blue containers you used? need to do a bit of landscaping myself and i've got a huge amount of decorative stone to remove and figured putting into those containers would be best!
Great video ! Well done
Great job. Love this kind of stuff. Digging is murder, fair play to you. Love your channel, cheers from Ireland 🇮🇪
Another great project!
Wow - what can anybody say ?
Two men / one machine --- and lots of hard work .
Fantastic job . Anyone would be super contented with that outcome .
Thank you
Awesome job 👍
Oh cool, your wheelbarrow has the same "Squeaky Wheel" sound enhancement pack installed on it as mine!
Hi Keith, you should of hired small tracked wheel barrow - we’ve used them on a few jobs (filling skips etc) and they are perfect compliment to 1/2T mini digger - each bucket takes equivalent of 5 wheelbarrows
Yeah I think I've seen Stuart at Proper DIY use one. Would have been great!
It can be so easy to underestimate how taxing some jobs are! You guys did a great job!
in the middle of doing a similar job myself, only theres no access to the back at all, so what has taken you a day has taken me around 2 weeks, im using a matock and a shovel for a 2x2m soakaway. back breaking work
Don't do a vertical hole like this, step the excavation. A m3 of soil weighs about 2 tonne, so if a side slides in not very good for you.
Its called a hopper as it collects water, as gutters and in the food industry too use hoppers too, same principal
Bloody good job 👍
Jolly good job. Before plastic crates were the norm i built a soakaway , bought some manhole rings and a cover set two door lintels across the base to rest the rings on lined the sides of the hole with plastic sheeting and backfilled with large rocks and added a manhole cover. Jobs a goodun 20 years later and i can still go down the manhole and clear our silt of which there is very little. I do like the idea of having access to inspect and desilt.
I've done mini versions using old milk - crates - work like a charm. I wrapped them in permeable membrane and connected via orange piping - so quite good to come on here and see I actually guessed it all fairly correctly.
Really interesting project, well done Keith and Aiden 👏 Oh and I liked the Cat pics. ;)
Superb and hard job. You looked tired at the end of the video, we understand. Super entertaining video as always. I’ve been watching you the last five years, or more, from Spain. Cheers from the sunny south.
I have been following Aidan for a while now and a Good job done guys, D
Hi Keith. No doubtvat all, mate, that was a blockbuster project! Sometimes , we wonder how we ever do these jobs. In your case, you did it , with no real need to have that particular battle ever again! Well done. Don
Cheers Don
Hi, great video. Can you tell me how you came to decide 10mm gravel and not larger? Why is this best for this application? Many thanks 😊 really enjoyed watching, ta. 👍
20mm is best as it leaves more voids, but much harder work to shovel and move around so that's why we went with 10mm
Random question . Where did you get those containers to store the gravel with the lid that clips on ! ?
I appreciate you admitting your incompetence with the digger and calling in Someone who knew what to do the amount of people who think it’s easy and hurt themselves I know a fella who thought it was easy having never driven a digger before he rented a 2t digger to do the job of a 12t and rolled the digger twice before hiring us in
I understand doing a job for yourself but with Somthing as potentially dangerous as a digger don’t over estimate yourself
Good job mate and very well explained 👍
You should use pipe lube fairy liquid can damage the seals
Correct, washing up liquid contains salt which can perish the seals
Started my working life at 13 as a groundworker. Absolutely loved it... but, it is literally the hardest work you could ever do. My spine was shot to bits by the time I was 27 though. Retrained as a surveyor. Much, much easier. 😂
Great video, I plan to do this some point this summer.
Good job you two. 💪
Proper Days graft that Keith!! Great video man 👌
I think it was when you stared cementing the drains in that I had a 'flashback-ish' moment to scenes of a chap in a little shed at the bottom of his garden. Boy how things have come on since then, eh Keith? A super video of; tough work, someone has to do it, and releif & satisfaction in a vital job, well done. 💯my friend. (And cheers to Aiden for his TH-cam camaraderie - I must pop over and see what he's made of this project)
That digger looks like it’s only two steps above a shovel. It looks like a toy. But obviously is a powerful piece of kit.
Great job, as always. Have you had any serious rain since it would be great to see the water disappear into the soak away
It's called a Hopper because that's what it is.
A Funnel shaped guide to catch whatever, could be coal, sand, flour, water, and the like and direct it into a vessel or tank or receptacle below.
I wonder if just replacing the slabs with a gravel or partial gravel patio would have worked given that your soil seemed rather sandy. Great job anyway and hard work too!
Great video. Our house was extended at some point, so the soakaway is only now maybe only 1.5m from the back of the house. No idea why the didnt move it, discovered it when the insurers sent someone round to deal with a blockage in the pipe that leads to the soakaway!
Need it moving but like you, our grass area of the garden is raised so can probably only move it another 1m before we reach that. Was going to attempt it myself, think I'll hire someone in!
brilliant job 👌
Great video!😊
Proper job that
Wonderful video.
Nice job!
That was a great video, you certainly could have used another lad to help (but I find that unless you’re doing it at the weekend lads are usually in short supply) cost wise without the 20 man hours @£50 per hour labour charge your parts costs were brilliant and I’m in no doubt that job would have been around £3k from a contractor as no one seems to want to come out for less these days! Thanks for sharing buddy!
That was a lot of work for one day, well done Keith, and how great that Aiden came over to help you out - top bloke, and a great channel too !
I can't believe what beautiful sand you had there just a few feet down, what a handy resource, you could have your own quarry - you'll be alright for a sand pit for baby Brown !
I have been considering doing one of these myself, but I think I should have done it years ago before all our tress got established as I think the roots would make it a nightmare !
Thanks
COOP
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Great job and good Price even, thanks your vidéo 🇨🇵
So a soakaway is where you dig deep enough to find sand in the ground? Then you place crates or gravel over sand covered by a membrane, then channel rainwater ftom gutters to soakaway location?
Yes