I didn't realize until today that my wife had taken pictures of the septic field work, so here are a couple of pictures of that.
This is the guy that came out and dug the soil pit, drew up the plans, and submitted all the proper forms to the Health Dept. for me.
And this is the septic installer digging the drain field trenches.
Now, on to current events!
We passed a milestone today, one that I was worried we wouldn't be able to accomplish. I lost some sleep last night thinking about this.
The crew from the power company showed up this morning with my electrician to get our electric service swapped over to the new feed. There were several issues with this that could have shut us down, but the crew that came out was great to work with and we all eventually managed to get the job done. Not without a lot of sweat and a few bad words, though.
This is what we were working with:
The old conduit is running horizontally, the new conduit is laid in the trench up to it. The last 35 feet or so of the original service to the house runs under my red barn, which would be a big PITA to move. After the garage is built, the red barn will be taken apart and moved to the level pad I had built down in the back yard. But right now, it has all the junk that used to be in my garage in it. Fortunately, the engineer agreed to let us splice the new conduit into the old at this point. It's not strictly by-the-book, but sometimes things are like that.
The way underground electric service is moved is this: Your electrician digs the trenches, lays the conduit in them and back-fills the trench. Once the new conduit is all ready, the electric company install crew shows up, disconnects the power from the transformer, pulls the meter off the house, and pulls the wires out of the old conduit. My electrician then cut the old conduit at the splice point, and (with some difficulty) joined the new and old conduits together.
The install crew didn't really like the 45 deg. connector used, but they agreed to give it a try. While the electrician was joining the conduits, the install crew pulled the new wires from the pole to the pedestal that had been set at about the mid point in the run. This part went OK, with the wires pulling in without much difficulty. They used one of their big trucks to pull the wires though the conduit.
The portion between the pedestal and the house was the tough part. They tried pulling the wires in just using the old arm-strong method, but they couldn't get them all the way through. They'd get about 3/4 of the way in and stop. I heard them talking about using one of their smaller trucks to help pull, but they were going to have to move a lot of their equipment to get it in close enough. I told them I had a little tractor, and I was pretty sure it could pull the wires if they could rig up a pulley over the conduit going into the ground. They positioned the trailer that was carrying the spool of wire so the roller shaft was over the conduit, hung a sheave from it, and then ran the pull rope through it. I hooked onto it and rolled slowly downhill. It worked, which made me very happy I had stayed home today.
This is the pedestal after the wires were pulled, and connected together.
Here's the conduit after they've been spliced together.
This shows how the old conduit runs under the red barn.
Had we been unable to get the wires to the meter through the conduit, we'd probably be running off our standby generator for a few days while some sort of temporary overhead service was installed.
I was so happy at the end of the day when my wife came home that to celebrate I turned on all the lights in the house and flushed all the commodes! Why? Cuz I can! :B
Now, the old garage foundation can be demolished.
:):)
2001 Lance 1121 on a 2016 F450 โScuse me while I whinge.
And for all you Scooby-Doo and Yosemite Sam typesโฆโฆโฆ..Letโs Go Brandon!!!