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Author Topic: Sump Pumps  (Read 977 times)

Offline Rodney Moorhead

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Sump Pumps
« on: June 22, 2011, 09:05:57 AM »
I have a question.  The house I bought was horribly landscaped and the basement would flood.  I re-landscaped it, put in a driveway that did not slant againts the foundation and moved the gutters out so they did not drain against the foundation. 

The previous owners fix was a sump pump.  I am getting radon from it.  Now that sump pump pit has been dryer than a bar in the bible belt on Easter Sunday for 3 years now.  Would there be a problem with me taking out the pump and filling the pit with concrete?

Rod (slightly glowing)
...Com on wanre niht scri?an sceadugenga

Offline AAllen

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Re: Sump Pumps
« Reply #1 on: June 22, 2011, 12:08:49 PM »
Most modern construction homes, with properly seal basement walls, drainage ect. do not need sump pumps.  So it could be removed and sealed, but do you want to?

Depending on where you are when the water table rises, anywhere near where the river flows today they are having this issue, you can still get seepage from it if there is any defects in the floor or basement walls.  If the contractor building the house did not have the landscaping gutters ect. correct do you completely trust their coating of the basement walls?  The house I grew up in had a sump and it was there do to there almost always being a high water table.  In fact we had the house treated for termites once and they drilled holes in the basement floor to pump the chemical they used under the foundation and every hole they drilled there was a 6" fountain of water that came out.

My recommendation would be consider sump hole suction to reduce your radon.  It caps the sump hole while leaving the water sump operational and adds a pump that evacuates excessive amounts of radon from under your home and vents it into the outside air where it gets diluted to a safe level.  This way you would be protected (to a degree) from future cracks in the basement floor or walls allowing radon to enter.  You would want to discuss your options with a contractor that has experiance in remediating radon issues to be certain that any particular sollution would work for your home.

Offline Mudinyeri

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Re: Sump Pumps
« Reply #2 on: June 22, 2011, 01:11:18 PM »
I agree with AAllen.  We have three sump pumps in our basement.  There is an underground spring that runs through our neighborhood.  When the water table rises, the water would come up through the floor.  We remedied that by running drain tile throughout the floor and draining it into three separate sump pumps.  One of those pumps also has a Radon remediation system.  IIRC, it cost about $1400 to have it installed a few years back.

Offline JebM

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Re: Sump Pumps
« Reply #3 on: June 28, 2011, 07:45:45 PM »
Filling your sump pit with concrete won't solve your Radon problem and will also eliminate the protection you get from the sump pump.  As a a former Radon mitigator, I would recommend leaving your sump pump in, and installing a Radon system.  Typically a system will cost between $750 - $1,300.