When I bought this house I had no idea that it sits on a very high water table. My sump pump can run almost every ten minutes in the spring and fall even though my neighbours' rarely seem to discharge. I live in Ontario where it gets pretty cold and often my sump pump is discharging when it is very cold outside. The problems are: 1) my sump discharges at the front of my house and runs onto my grass and then freezes on the sidewalk - often gets to more than an inch thick; 2) my neighbour gets annoyed as most of the icing ends up on his driveway and sidewalk due to slope of street; 3) I have connected 1 1/2" pvc pipe to divert the water into my back yard and this works well except in the winter, when the pipe often freezes up.
My questions are: 1) I have thought of drilling a small hole in the pipe near the beginning of the discharge pipe to break the vacuum to allow the pipe to drain faster - will this be OK? 2) The discharge pipe is about 25 ft long and I have wondered if I could put roof deicing cable inside the pipe to prevent it from freezing - I would drop the end of the cable a couple of feet into the vertical sump pipe in the house wall to prevent the force of the water (hopefully) from pushing the cable out, and then simply run it inside the pvc pipe to the end. Do you think this might work? 3) Any suggestions that might work better??
I have read of others who suggested connecting to a 4" or 6" pipe, but there is an outside steel chimney on the same wall that prevents me getting more than a 1 1/2' pipe behind it. I guess I could try changing the discharge pipe to a larger size once it is beyond the chimney pipe??? I also wondered if it might be best to have the 1 1/2" pipe discharge into roof gutter after the chimney, and simply put roof deicing cable along that roof gutter until it emptied into my back yard??
This will be my 5th winter with this problem and I'm almost pulling my hair out. for the city to connect me to the street sewer, the cost will be over $11,000 which I can't afford. Please let me know if you have suggestions.
My questions are: 1) I have thought of drilling a small hole in the pipe near the beginning of the discharge pipe to break the vacuum to allow the pipe to drain faster - will this be OK? 2) The discharge pipe is about 25 ft long and I have wondered if I could put roof deicing cable inside the pipe to prevent it from freezing - I would drop the end of the cable a couple of feet into the vertical sump pipe in the house wall to prevent the force of the water (hopefully) from pushing the cable out, and then simply run it inside the pvc pipe to the end. Do you think this might work? 3) Any suggestions that might work better??
I have read of others who suggested connecting to a 4" or 6" pipe, but there is an outside steel chimney on the same wall that prevents me getting more than a 1 1/2' pipe behind it. I guess I could try changing the discharge pipe to a larger size once it is beyond the chimney pipe??? I also wondered if it might be best to have the 1 1/2" pipe discharge into roof gutter after the chimney, and simply put roof deicing cable along that roof gutter until it emptied into my back yard??
This will be my 5th winter with this problem and I'm almost pulling my hair out. for the city to connect me to the street sewer, the cost will be over $11,000 which I can't afford. Please let me know if you have suggestions.