Anything to do with you guys - Has lll been up north ?
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Its a common feature HP, the groundworkers/drain layers are working on a blank canvas then the boundaries are physically put in and it happens.
Most of the time the fencing guy or bricklayer will bridge the cover by 30mm or so, just enough to give the impression that it can be lifted, but the sadistic bastards know that it can`t
Edited By flowjoe on 1241215745
Most of the time the fencing guy or bricklayer will bridge the cover by 30mm or so, just enough to give the impression that it can be lifted, but the sadistic bastards know that it can`t
Edited By flowjoe on 1241215745
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Yeah, there's a couple down here on my estate like that crossing the boundaries.henpecked wrote:BTW how did an inspection lid end up on a boundary?
Might be worth looking into.
HP
Couldn't see it happening these days.....
RW Gale Ltd - Civils & Surfacing Contractors based in Somerset
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For some reason, there was a policy on new houses built in the late 60s and throughout the 1970s for the drains to run smack-bang down the middle of the gap between adjacent blocks. Naturally, the pipework and the chambers were all well and good and were passed by the Building Inspector (as they were back then).
The houses were built, roof on, first then second fix,wet trades complete and then the external works would be done last of all. A single course of 3x2s would be laid around the blocks, and a fence thrown up along the boundary, and, without fail, that fence would follow the same bloody line as the drains, resulting in a base panel resting on top of the crown unit and cover.
Because the base panel and the top panel could be removed, granting access to the access chamber, this practice was deemed acceptable, and continued for over a decade until someone finally realised that it was much, much better to off-set the drains to one side or t'other.
Nowadays, we might find it hard to believe our predecessors in this game could be so bleeding gormless, but the building trade back then was a very different animal!
The houses were built, roof on, first then second fix,wet trades complete and then the external works would be done last of all. A single course of 3x2s would be laid around the blocks, and a fence thrown up along the boundary, and, without fail, that fence would follow the same bloody line as the drains, resulting in a base panel resting on top of the crown unit and cover.
Because the base panel and the top panel could be removed, granting access to the access chamber, this practice was deemed acceptable, and continued for over a decade until someone finally realised that it was much, much better to off-set the drains to one side or t'other.
Nowadays, we might find it hard to believe our predecessors in this game could be so bleeding gormless, but the building trade back then was a very different animal!
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