Bolson32
Well-known member
Hey Guys,
We're breaking ground on a 24x32 addition over a full basement that I'm GCing and doing some of the work for on my own. The budget is pretty tight with the HELOC we have to work with for the next year or so, so I'm looking to be frugal where I can be. That said, we are adding to the side of the house that has had basement water issues previously, and I'm taking a bit of a belt and suspenders approach to the waterproofing already. I'm already planning on asphalt sealing/priming the poured walls and covering with a 60mil waterproofing membrane, adding 2" of XPS followed by a dimple board/drainage mat down to a drain tile burrito of geotextile and rock around a perforated pipe.
My question is, can I get away with 3" pipe? And also drain pipe not sch40. It seems to be what Standard Water(basement waterproofing company) uses in their drain tile and it's over twice as cheap, 4" sch40 is 4x the price of 3" sewer and drain pipe. Socked, corrugated pipe is also cheaper yet, but it seems like rigid pipe is the preferred approach these days.
Any tips would be greatly appreciated!
We're breaking ground on a 24x32 addition over a full basement that I'm GCing and doing some of the work for on my own. The budget is pretty tight with the HELOC we have to work with for the next year or so, so I'm looking to be frugal where I can be. That said, we are adding to the side of the house that has had basement water issues previously, and I'm taking a bit of a belt and suspenders approach to the waterproofing already. I'm already planning on asphalt sealing/priming the poured walls and covering with a 60mil waterproofing membrane, adding 2" of XPS followed by a dimple board/drainage mat down to a drain tile burrito of geotextile and rock around a perforated pipe.
My question is, can I get away with 3" pipe? And also drain pipe not sch40. It seems to be what Standard Water(basement waterproofing company) uses in their drain tile and it's over twice as cheap, 4" sch40 is 4x the price of 3" sewer and drain pipe. Socked, corrugated pipe is also cheaper yet, but it seems like rigid pipe is the preferred approach these days.
Any tips would be greatly appreciated!
