HOW TO FIX A NEGATIVE SLOPE | Basement Drainage Tips!
Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль
Here's some tips on how to drive drainage water away from your house and keep it protected!
There's a hammer drill, an impact drill, a back hoe... and Rod.
#Drainage #PrepWork #BasementFix #NegativeSlope #Backhoe #doitright
Пікірлер: 589
I just love when people have to the point clear tutorial videos. 6mins and I walk away wiser. Not like the 29min videos of excessive information and you don’t walk away any wiser.
@ipitrader
2 жыл бұрын
Agreed !
@joeyree22
2 жыл бұрын
Yes!! Dito!
@kyleheiser3989
2 жыл бұрын
sing it!
@chaserzx383
2 жыл бұрын
Ya people trying to stretch videos to make those ad revenue points.
@vendettaink7567
Жыл бұрын
Amen
👍🏽an old guy taught me this when I bought my first home. He said, before you go paying $$$$ to water proof, clean your gutters, down spouts and check your slope. 💯%
@ipitrader
2 жыл бұрын
@Brandon Pleasant > Thank you for passing on that great advise ! Much appreciated.
This video is very simple, easy to understand, and straight to the point! None of that 5 minute intro/marketing before the video starts. Thank you!
@spunkyvic77
3 жыл бұрын
My sentiments exactly! He's a great teacher!
@ipitrader
2 жыл бұрын
@@spunkyvic77 Yes! he is great!
Amazing how many people and so called experts don't know the difference between ground and surface water. Good info!
Thank you for pointing out ground water vs surface as well as the crawl space tid bit. Informative video overall!
Fantastic video. After looking online for articles on this as a new homeowner I come across your video and get more info and real world examples/explanations than all those articles combined. Thank you for this! So great to hear someone who knows what they are talking about explain the topic in a clear, concise and easy to understand format.
This was probably the best tutorial for grading your yard! An invaluable amount of information here
Really appreciate the clear and concise tutorial…the comedic value and whimsical production gives it a cherry on top! Bravo folks!!!!
Buying a house and had foundation concerns. This was actually super useful.
Short, informative, correct! Good video.
PHENOMENAL! This is a huge problem here in Nashville. Love seeing this and this market is wide open!!!!
Very simple yet extremely important information. Thanks for sharing this!!
lol not only is this informative, the editing and animation is on point!
great video...its all about directing water folks, positive drainage.
Thank you. As others have said: great information and straight to the point. I’m going to get some window wells right now!
Great easy explanation and fun interaction. Thanks for the quick and easiest explanation.
On each side of the house, you could also cut a swale so that water drains towards the swale and away from the foundation of the house. The swale would then carry water to the back of the property.
Thanks for this helpful video, this will help me keep water away from the basement.
Amazing video, very informative funny and straight to the point, thank you for sharing your expertise!
Thanks, Uncle Larry! I have a terrible water flow/erosion issue in my crawl space ever since a neighbor dumped a foot of hot pack in the alley, and I’ve been scratching my head ever since. I think I’ve got it figured now. 🎉
I have this exact problem ! Took me like 3 years of investigation and struggle (water comin in the house) to figure out my slopes and window well were the root cause. I really whish I had seen this video sooner. Perfectly explained ! Thanks a lot !!
Super clear information. Thank you!
This is what I need done. Very informative. Thank you
Very good explanations. Thank you very much Uncle Larry
I was wondering how to deal with sloping the grade when the windows set low, your info on the use of window wells is valuable, also the difference between ground and surface water, good stuff.
Well done explaining the issues and solutions
Thanks Uncle Larry...very informative video.
Good information. We are currently dealing with this problem. Thank you.
Love the clear language in the video thanks for sharing
Awesome information. Surface water = slope repair. Ground water = Sump pump.
Loved this and I was about to ask about groundwater and you answered that question. Fantastic!
This guy is a master. Thank you.
I did this for a neighbor's house. After we built up the slope and tamped in in place we covered it in several sheets of black plastic and added a layer of decorative white stone. Looks great and two years later still no leaks into the basement!
This is a very useful video, thanks. Make water flow away than seal the cracks.
Thank you! I’m in Great Bend trying to do something similar
Learned a lot in this. Thank you!!
LOL @ "If this is my level, which it is..."
I did this exact thing on the most deeply buried wall of my basement. I installed tall window wells and clear covers. I used Flex Shot to create a seal against the walls, but put it on the outside edge to keep water away from the screws. I then built a grade that drops at least six inches and extends eight feet from the foundation. At the bottom of the slope I dug a 6" x 6" trench the whole length of the grade. I put a plastic landscaping barrier against the side of the trench closest to the foundation and filled the trench with gravel. I then surrounded the grade with 4x4s, put down 6 mil plastic sheeting from the wall to the gravel and covered it 3-4" deep with river rock. Added similar installations around the corners of of the house.
Extremely informative video. Thanks a lot for sharing your knowledge 🙌.
Thanks for the video. This information was very helpful!
Excellent tips! Thanks!
The thing with the windows... amazing
Great informative video, guys!
Very helpful! Thank you, and God bless!
Thank you great explanation!
thanks! just what I was looking for for slope calculation!
Thanks, I’m doing this, this week!✊🏽
@5:30 gold, the first of many videos I’ve seen that distinguishes between groundwater (high water table) and surface-water issues.
@ipitrader
2 жыл бұрын
@David S > Exactly, no one talks about groundwater ever! Everyone tells you dig around your basement wall and insulate it, cover it ! and put a drain around the house perimeter. But I have never heard of the option of installing a sump pump or doing the French Drain around the basement. Or about the two different issues of Surface water and underground water like you said. I didn't understand before ... now I do. I love his videos.
His comment about spiders is spot on. I didn’t know this till I purchased a home with water issues that were not completely disclosed to me. However I put a sump pump in basement slab and the hydraulic pressure is relieved so no more water problems. I use a dehumidifier to keep the basement dry and no more spiders, they love moisture.
Thanks for the tips!
Great video. Will be taking on this project this Fall.
Two points, as someone who's done this work before and even ran underground 160 feet of the white schedule 2 indoor plumbing pipe (thick and which won't collapse like the black coiled flimsy crap meant for above ground use) tied into downspouts, with surface drains around the back and side of my parents house at a 1/4 inch slope as their backyard was a hill, digging down to just over 3 feet before hitting the downhill slope at the front of the yard : 1) You should've used a sod cutter or lacking that a simple flat edged shovel to cut underneath the existing sod under its roots and rolled it up to save it and put back in place after grading and compacting the added soil -it still will settle, and 2) in lieu of using 2 inch thick sod, from your view of the finished soil it will settle and compact at least two inches at the house's edge (personal experience from putting in and grading four complete yards, soil, sod, and seed). You could have rented and used a steel roller (light when empty til you get to work site where you fill it up with water, which works great since water weighs 8 pounds/gallon) to compact the soil but still the soil should have been added up to the tops of the installed cellar wells before compacting and putting back the sod. Soils degree of compacting over time is considerable and not to be underestimated. Leave household electricity issues to a certifed electrician, landscaping issues to a landscaper or a professional groundskeeper with experience. Still, your concept was correct. How they put those cellar windows in at construction without cellar wells at probably $10. cost to the builder and maybe 30 minutes time is criminal. Also, the building code at the time was lousy.
@marcellomastroianni6725
Жыл бұрын
In response to your comments. Not sure what your local building code is, but in Ontario, Canada, the black coiled flimsy crap which is actually called weeping tile is what is run around the perimeter of the footing which is at one point run through the footing into the basement terminating into a sump basin where a sump pump is installed. The weeping tile around the perimeter of the footing must be encapsulated with 6 inches of clear stone on the top and outside of and the weeping tile should be pinned tight to the footing and should be at the same height as the footing. So I'll have to politely disagree with your assertion that it is meant for above ground use, because it is not. As for window well drainage, building codes here require a vertical piece of weeping tile that is tied into the footing weeping tile, strapped to the foundation wall and terminating just below the sill of the window. If your concern is that the weeping tile has the potential to collapse, which should not be a concern under the pressure of settling or compacted soil, then you can fill the weeping tile with clear stone. This is typically done by some not for the concern of it collapsing, but more so to prevent soil from plugging it should the top be left wide open, but it would ease any concerns one might have of it collapsing, but is not required by building code regulations. To collapse a piece of weeping tile it requires a direct blunt force impact. Settling or compacted soil would apply equal pressure around the weeping tile which would make it impossible to collapse. Using solid pipe is a bad idea for 2 reasons. 1) Cost 2) It does not allow for any of the rain water to dissipate through it so you therefore will be pumping 100% of the rain water that uses that path of least resistance and you will be burning sump pumps out more often than you should aside from the added hydro costs for that sump pump to run that frequently. Window wells cost about 100 bucks. Using 2 inch pipe for outdoor drainage is foolish....just my 0.02.
You are awesome. Thank you for this information.
Thanks for sharing nicely explained
Good video. I like the 1inch per foot of basement wall. Thank you
Thank you - this was very helpful
Great tutorial. Thanks.
Thank you. I just learned something that you were just taking care of surface water and if it is ground water then we have to locate our water table which is tough and then you said the perforated and solid pipes would take care of that.
Thank you so much for the idea. I have the same problem
Awesome video man, thank you!
Great video. We were having the same problem. Very clearly put. 😊
Thanks for sharing this video.
Thank you!!!! This was super helpful!
Yep, I AM NEWLY SUBSCRIBED! ;) Great stuff!
Great video! Thank you
Thank you sr, your video really help me alot!!
I love the tips ! Great teacher! Thank you! Subbed.
GREAT VIDEO. VERY COOL. THANK YOU!
Yeah , I will call in some dirt to fix my problem. Thanks for the Vid. Problem solved !
Thanks for sharing your experience. We have to improve the drainage around our house, but it is very hard because we get a lot of rain and a few feet above sea level. We only have to dig 18 inches before we hit ground water. Our house sits on a slab foundation and I cannot find the line where the slab stops and the brick begins.
Awesome video, thank you
My negative slope was nowhere near as bad as the one in the video. Nevertheless, heavy spring rains would always flood my basement. In the summer, I collected my bagged lawn clippings and placed them along the foundation, it composts into the soil and builds it up. Haven’t had any water in the basement in over 10 years. The negative slope is completely gone.
Thank you for posting this
Great explanation 🦅
Amazing video thanks bro!!
this is amazing, thank you!
Excellent video
Okay thank you guys! I will try this on a smaller side of the house
Great explanation of negative slope fix, HOWEVER I would run a compactor and get all your soil compacted maintaining proper slope away from the house foundation.
@Cyborg9799
3 жыл бұрын
I like that idea.
@Lenser
3 жыл бұрын
Without compaction that fluffy 1' dirt will shrink down to 3" and recreate the negative slope problem.
@ipitrader
2 жыл бұрын
@Max > Yes, that's a good strategy, but I rather build up a sloping away concrete pad of at least 4 to 5 feet in that area, to never have that problem again. Provided is a surface water problem of course, and is an area where it rains often.
Very informative video - thank you. I have a fenced yard and the right 1/3 turns to a swamp when it rains. I need to find someone in my area to do this for me. Not sure if I need to search for a "landscaper" or "yard grading".
Fellow Kansan here preparing to fix this common Kansas issue lol
Good video. I don't know why it came up on my KZread but I liked it. I do have some slope issues.
Thanks, Larry.
Underground flashing is getting my interest love to hear your take
Nice looking out Larry
This was great, thanks!
Great video!
as a first time home buyer, i've been looking into stuff I was told during my house inspection to work on. Degrading the house was one of the topics. This video is super helpful!! I'll be using this once I get a chance to work on my house!
@a.h.6404
2 жыл бұрын
Hi. I bought my house 3 years ago. After a few months in the new house, my basement got flooded. Then again it got flooded in May 2019, May 2020, July 2020, and today. I don’t know who you are, but please make sure your new house doesn’t look pretty but has hidden issues.
@ezze-does-it
2 жыл бұрын
@@a.h.6404 Did you do something to address it the first year? It will flood every year if you don't
@a.h.6404
2 жыл бұрын
@@ezze-does-it I just had a very expensive dewatering system put in in April. It's been really dry in Illinois this year so I haven't gad a chance to see if the new dewatering system ia good.
This is exactly my situation. But its the whole house.. Great video. New sub. Great content.
Thanks Uncle Larry!
this really helped me and I don't even have a basement. lol - BUT I do have a drainage issue in my new backyard because sections of the ground around my concrete patio just outside my backdoor is around 5 or 6 inches lower than the rest of the yard. They joys of buying a "new" home!
Real good animations!
Very helpful. Thx.
Great job > great teacher
You are a genius!
Hey good video don't forget the vapor barrier talking about putting that in your crawl space.
I was just looking for a how-to and ended up finding this video, I’m pretty sure lived across the street back in college.
Buying a house right now, shit a brick when I saw water in the basement until the inspector pointed out the negative slope and pooling on the outside the soil has deteriorated 4” but the wall in the basement hasn’t bowed yet... this video put my mind at ease lol very good video. Reassured myself that I can do the grading myself
@ipitrader
2 жыл бұрын
@Justin Donatos > You shit a brick? lmao ha ha ha...
Buen video muchas gracias!!!
I have this same issue in Hungary. Garden slops towards the house, so walls are taking water in. Thanks for the video