Inspection chamber

Foul and surface water, private drains and public sewers, land drains and soakaways, filter drains and any other ways of getting rid of water.
Granny
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Post: # 13986Post Granny

Just a quick question, what would be the min size for a man access rectangular inspection chamber approx. 1.7-2.0m deep?

Its for access to ducts, not drainage pipes but I would think the principle is the same.

Cheers

PS. just found this site, excellent info and huge coincidence I was brought up in Culcheth from aged 4 until I left at 20!

lutonlagerlout
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Post: # 13992Post lutonlagerlout

dont know the regs but cover would be 600 by 450 and i would have thought you need at least the same for inspections if not a little bigger
cheers tony :)
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Dave_L
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Post: # 13999Post Dave_L

Fitted a 600 x 450 shallow type Trojan cover to a 2m deep stormwater inspection/collection chamber today - climbed down inside (to clean up afterwards) with ease.
RW Gale Ltd - Civils & Surfacing Contractors based in Somerset

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lutonlagerlout
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Post: # 14002Post lutonlagerlout

you are obviously not eating enough pies dave,i dropped my pointing trowel down a similar the other week and had to get a magnet to get it out (and yes I did eat all the pies)
cheers tony :)
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Dave_L
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Post: # 14004Post Dave_L

haha! Nah, the weight is falling off me at the moment Tony, I'm loosing my beer belly!

Had a couple of pasties yesterday, does that count? :p
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Granny
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Post: # 14009Post Granny

Thanks for replies, I probably wasn't that clear in my origianl post. I meant the actual chamber size rather than the cover size. It would be a rectangular chamber.

Cheers

Dave_L
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Post: # 14012Post Dave_L

1000 x 675
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lutonlagerlout
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Post: # 14017Post lutonlagerlout

that sounds like my waist and inside leg dave :D
pasties are ok as long as you eat them at a 2:1 ratio
cheers tony :)
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seanandruby
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Post: # 14025Post seanandruby

tony you bad boy pasties are bad for you with your stomach problem ???
sean

lutonlagerlout
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Post: # 14027Post lutonlagerlout

tony you bad boy pasties are bad for you with your stomach problem
yes that was the problem,too much rabbit food not enough pasties :)
as an aside, as anyone who does building work knows, you need to eat to work 8 hrs a day digging,flagging etc. my missus survives on an apple and a rice cake all day at her keyboard,that just aint possible on site
going to buy a paslode nail gun now,now that is a boys toy!! :D
tony
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seanandruby
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Post: # 14028Post seanandruby

it worries me to hear some of you lads go down these manholes (2.00 m)is quite deep. do you use gas detector?
sean

lutonlagerlout
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Post: # 14034Post lutonlagerlout

i never work alone on sewers ,its just too dangerous,in fact its not good practise to work alone on any building project in case of accidents.
most domestic runs should be vented surely??
got me thinking now
tony :)
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seanandruby
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Post: # 14040Post seanandruby

man cz its storm water. you never know what filters in m8. i was working on a storm run and had to have water tested because it made my eyes sore and got a skin reaction, imagine if i was in deep? this stuff flowed into the river and killed thousands of fish. they got a massive fine. as you know its best to lift the lids up and down the run for air circulation. always err on the side of caution.
sean

Dave_L
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Post: # 14042Post Dave_L

seanandruby wrote:it worries me to hear some of you lads go down these manholes (2.00 m)is quite deep. do you use gas detector?
The one in question we were involved in this week was a very dry storm drain. Wouldn't be too keen to go down into a foul one though......although we do far worse jobs with foul drainage though........
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seanandruby
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Post: # 14044Post seanandruby

dry or wet the risk is always there m8. fumes are invisible....gas,exhaust etc.
sean

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