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- Path: sparky!uunet!bcstec!bcsaic!tanner
- From: tanner@bcsaic.boeing.com (Jim Tanner)
- Newsgroups: misc.consumers.house
- Subject: Re: septic lines
- Message-ID: <91147@bcsaic.boeing.com>
- Date: 21 Jan 93 08:18:18 GMT
- References: <leonard.727451117@aix3090b.uky.edu>
- Distribution: usa
- Organization: Boeing Computer Services, Seattle
- Lines: 30
-
- In article <leonard.727451117@aix3090b.uky.edu> leonard@aix3090b.uky.edu (Leonard Lauria) writes:
- >How, aside from lots of digging!!, can one find the location of
- >the septic lines?
- >
- >I would like to know where they are so I can plan on keeping everything
- >else away from the field.
- >
- >Any simple ways?
-
- Depending on how accurately you need to know...
-
- Out here the county health department regulates septic installations.
- One of the things they require is that the installer of the septic
- system file an "as-built" scale site plan with the county (showing,
- at a minimum, where the house and the septic components are, with
- measurements to each component), so the septic components can later be
- located. When I bought my 1957 house last year I went to the health
- department and they made a copy of the site plan, and it was easy to
- locate everything within 5-10 feet.
-
- If you need to be more accurate you can do some probing with a metal
- rod or small-scale digging in spots to precisely locate the components
- (they shouldn't be very deep, perhaps 12-18 inches for the drain field).
-
- For the high-tech approach, there are electronic "bugs" that you (or
- more precisely, a company you hire) can flush down the toilet and track
- (with appropriate sensor gear) out to the main septic tank. Once that's
- located you can expose the tank, pump it out, and then flush the bug down
- the drain field lines if you need to. Not cheap, though. I was quoted
- $600 for simply locating a septic tank.
-