Replacing sewer line - connection to main

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Jwray

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I have a sewer line that is part PVC (4") and part terra cotta. The old (all terra cotta) line was invaded and broken by roots. The previous homeowner took the cheaper way out and only replaced about 1/2 of the line.

The remaining terra cotta half starts outside underground and continues to the street. I've had to have roots roto-rooted out of it once. They even worked their way back into the PVC portion of the line.

I'm considering replacing the remaining terra cotta portion myself. It's only about 30' worth. I see a couple of obstacles that I need some help with.

1. The last approx 5' of the line runs under the sidewalk, curb and out to the street. How do I run the PVC under that?

2. How do I connect to the sewer main?

3. (This may make 1 & 2 moot). Am I responsible for going all the way to the sewer main and connecting or do I just have to meet the city at the property line? If I just meet them should I expect a charge for their 5' and the connection even though it's old and failing?

Thanks,

Joel
 

The Pipe Rat

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How deep is your sewer line? This can be very dangerous work if over about four feet deep. Not recommended for amatuers. If shallower than that you may have a go at it just be extremely careful of cave ins. The only way to replace the line with open cut methods is to cut the street if you need to go all the way to the main. There are some pipe rehabilitation methods where a liner can be installed without digging up the whole line but is definately a specialized field only for professionals with proper equipment and knowledge. Not familiar with pricing for those methods but I would doubt it would be cost effective for a 30' residential sewer. As far as if your responsibility ends at the property line or the main would be up to your local sewer district as rules vary fom municipality to municipality.
 

Jwray

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My sewer line; local sewer authority

The line is definitely less than 4 feet below the surface. The building drain exits the house about 3 feet above the basement floor and about 3 feet of the basement is above grade. In addition the grade slopes down as it heads to the street. So even with the slope of the sewer line it is actually in a very shallow trench. This is all probably very unusual, but works to my favor in this case. The house is 80 yrs old and originally had a dirt basement floor, so that may have contributed to the building drain exiting so high (vs. under the basement floor) in relation to the structure elevation.

I called the local sewer authority yesterday and was able to talk with a very helpful engineer. Their normal practice is to run their lateral to the property line and I would meet them there starting with a cleanout and continuing on into the house (or in this case on to the existing PVC cleanout 30' from the property line since the line is already partially replaced with good PVC). However this installation is so old that there is no cleanout at the property line and their lateral is probably old and just as much in need of replacement as the old portion of my sewer line.

He was not sure how they would handle that situation, but is checking on it for me.

I realize this saga may be boring for some, but I'll tell it on the chance that it may help someone else in the same situation some day.

Thanks,

Joel
 

Jwray

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Response from local authority engineer

Well here's the end of the saga. BTW I'm impressed with the responsiveness and helpfullness of the local authority. Tax dollars seem to be working there.

The local authority is fine with me coming to the property line, which I believe is on my side of the sidewalk and makes life easier for me. I would end there with a cleanout and then stub out so I can connect to their lateral (which is probably terra cotta) with a Fernco.

If I find their lateral to be in bad shape I can request that they look at it and assess it for replacement. In my mind digging a "test hole" at the property line to check out the line would be the first step in starting the replacement.

The only problem I forsee is if I replace my entire line with PVC roots from the tree planted on the city right of way (between sidewalk and curb) and within feet of the city sewer lateral could still invade the terra cotta lateral and make their way back up into my PVC section. I would have a very good case at this point to have the city come and snake their lateral and maybe my line since the cause of the problem would be very obvious. From what the engineer said I think this would be a relatively easy job to convince them especially with my new cleanout at the property line for them to work with.

I'm satisfied with the info I have and will feel comfortable proceeding when the time comes. I'm hoping it will hold out a bit longer as I have plenty to do inside still.

Hope this will be helpful to someone else with the same issue.

Happy Plumbing,

Joel
 

jdewees

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Pending on how far away the main is from the sidewalk,and pending size of the old pipe you sometimes can slide the PVC through the terra cotta into the main.I have done several jobs like this and it worked great. Good Luck
 

Jwray

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Sounds like a good idea

Hey, that sounds great. My property line is 5-6 feet away from the main, so I may be able to slide through the old pipe if the diameter works out.

Any possibility the inspector or the sewer department will not like this plan? Anything special to do to keep them happy?

My sewer line happens to empty into the main right at a manhole cover, so it is easy to see when the pipe comes through. Should I just slide the pipe in so it is flush with the end of the old pipe? Anything require to "seal" the end where it intersects the main?

Thanks,
Joel
 

Carewarner

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Pending on how far away the main is from the sidewalk,and pending size of the old pipe you sometimes can slide the PVC through the terra cotta into the main.I have done several jobs like this and it worked great. Good Luck

Hi,
I have a sewer lateral I need to replace also, and was told by the company that scoped my line that I have a 4" CI pipe exiting the house that couples with 6" terracotta pipe segments. The main hole in the line is actually out in the street so the city will be repairing that, but my house is nearly 100 years old and I'd like to take advantage of the fact that the city will be handling the excavation out in the street to replace the terracotta segment and save over half of my excavation costs! From the camera views of the terracotta segment, it is still totally open, so I was wondering whether I could just slide pipe through as you've suggested above. However, when I was trying to find out whether I could just slide a 4" HDPE line through while looking online, everywhere I looked they said no. So can you tell me more about you did this? The distance of the entire line is under 25 feet, and I was hoping to just dig out about a 4' square hole to use flexible pipe like they do when bursting, but if I can just slide it through myself I can save a bundle of money on the project. Would greatly appreciate anything you can tell me about this.
 

Carewarner

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Pending on how far away the main is from the sidewalk,and pending size of the old pipe you sometimes can slide the PVC through the terra cotta into the main.I have done several jobs like this and it worked great. Good Luck

I too have a sewer lateral that I'd like to replace. I was told by the company that scoped out our line that the 4" CI line transitioned to 6" terracotta segments about 4' beyond our front porch foundation wall. Everywhere I looked online to find out whether just running a pipe through it rather than having to burst the line said it wasn't possible, so I was pretty excited to see that you've been able to slide PVC through the terracotta into the main.
I was thinking about trying to use HDPE pipe so I could keep my excavation size to a minimum, but have no idea just how "flexible" that pipe is and whether human hands could bend it enough to snake it through vs a pipe bursting machine. The total run from the CI to the city main is about 24'.

The actual breach in our line is out in the street, so the city will be excavating and repairing that, whereas my terracotta line is still clean and clear all the way through to that sudden (giant) hole in the city's concrete segment. However, my house was built in 1924 and I could see that there was some slight separating starting to take place between the tc segments and figured I should go ahead and replace that line now to take advantage of fact that the city will be doing all the excavation and patching out there in the street, which will drastically cut my costs, work, etc. So I'll only have to excavate in one spot. Otherwise, to have enough room to use a long enough piece of PVC to get through to the city's trench and then couple it with another piece back to the CE, I would have to excavate all the way to the sidewalk. I'd much prefer to use a single piece of HDPE if possible. Can you go into greater detail about this fix and if I can do it with HDPE, how big a hole do I need to have the necessary working space to get the job done?

Any information you can share about this whole process would be greatly appreciated!

Carole

BTW,
 

Cory Alexander

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Hi,
I have a sewer lateral I need to replace also, and was told by the company that scoped my line that I have a 4" CI pipe exiting the house that couples with 6" terracotta pipe segments. The main hole in the line is actually out in the street so the city will be repairing that, but my house is nearly 100 years old and I'd like to take advantage of the fact that the city will be handling the excavation out in the street to replace the terracotta segment and save over half of my excavation costs! From the camera views of the terracotta segment, it is still totally open, so I was wondering whether I could just slide pipe through as you've suggested above. However, when I was trying to find out whether I could just slide a 4" HDPE line through while looking online, everywhere I looked they said no. So can you tell me more about you did this? The distance of the entire line is under 25 feet, and I was hoping to just dig out about a 4' square hole to use flexible pipe like they do when bursting, but if I can just slide it through myself I can save a bundle of money on the project. Would greatly appreciate anything you can tell me about this.
I personally would never slide pipe through existing pipe nor would I allow it to pass inspection. A lines is different and adheres to existing pipe. You're better off replacing or lining. I would check with your local tree committee to see what the guidelines are for tree removal and request a less invasive root system type of tree for the parkway or you will in the same boat 7-10 years down the road.
 
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