Posted: Fri Jul 20, 2012 9:34 am
"When is a soakaway not a soakaway... when it's a hole" I get that - thanks Tony for the post and for all the excellent material on the site.
I was all set up to build a nice land drain with a 0.6m3 aquacell soakaway. But then... my site investigation
My question is this - I dug a trial pit and left it overnight - I didn't go to the full 1.2m, just 0.5m and about 20cmX20cm
When I dug the pit the subsoil was really quite dry, so I was hoping the water table was deeper
Anyway this morning, there's still over 30cm of water in the pit - the level has only dropped by 18cm.
Does this definitely mean
1. I have hit the water table at 18cm below surface, or
2. The soil is just not very porous (I know...it's clay!!)
I'm thinking that if it's 2., a deeper hole could generate more hydrostatic pressure - 0.2-0.3 Bar and drain, or even better I may hit a more porous sublayer.
If it's 1., then the I assume the project is off.
Any thoughts please.
I was all set up to build a nice land drain with a 0.6m3 aquacell soakaway. But then... my site investigation
My question is this - I dug a trial pit and left it overnight - I didn't go to the full 1.2m, just 0.5m and about 20cmX20cm
When I dug the pit the subsoil was really quite dry, so I was hoping the water table was deeper
Anyway this morning, there's still over 30cm of water in the pit - the level has only dropped by 18cm.
Does this definitely mean
1. I have hit the water table at 18cm below surface, or
2. The soil is just not very porous (I know...it's clay!!)
I'm thinking that if it's 2., a deeper hole could generate more hydrostatic pressure - 0.2-0.3 Bar and drain, or even better I may hit a more porous sublayer.
If it's 1., then the I assume the project is off.
Any thoughts please.