Pardon the long post...Brief history on my house. Built in 76. Historically had water in the basement 3 times. Once in 2008 it had a film of water across the whole basement (maybe 1/4 inch), which was during the largest floods in the history of the area. Again in 2010, it was a year like this one, very, very wet and continuous rains. Had a couple inches of water and 2 floor pumps going to keep it out. In 2012 it had a trickle out of a corner, we were on our way to a wedding and I put some towels down and that's all it needed.
After these events I brought 2 dump trucks of dirt in, built the whole outsid above grade. Routed a couple down spots further away, installed gutter guards to keep leaves out, replaced my broken concrete patio and replaced the driveway.
I let it sit 3 years with no water events before I decided to start finishing the basement. My house is small, just under 800 square feet. I have half the basement finished length wise, which would be half the north end, half the south and the whole east wall.
We have been getting record rainfalls for 2 months now in my part of iowa, and luckily until today no water. Finally some relief in sight after tomorrow. The ground is literally an over full sponge right now. I checked today and I had some water along the WEST wall, and through hairline cracks in the floor on the unfinished side.
Obviously this is ground water. I don't know anything about sump pumps. I do know that the proper way would be to tear up along the walls, around the perimeter and put drains in. I don't have the money for that (and wont drop a fortune into a small house I wont be living in for a very long time).
Can I benefit from just cutting a hole somewhere in the floor, guessing on the side or corner I have the most water, and just putting a sump in there? A buddy of mine suggested that. He said "just dig a hole for a sump pit and put a pump in there, that'll take care if your ground water "
So basically, will digging a sump pit without perimeter drains help at all? Basically just something to expel the soaked up ground water?
Pics below are the water in the crack in the floor and against the wall where it meets the floor
After these events I brought 2 dump trucks of dirt in, built the whole outsid above grade. Routed a couple down spots further away, installed gutter guards to keep leaves out, replaced my broken concrete patio and replaced the driveway.
I let it sit 3 years with no water events before I decided to start finishing the basement. My house is small, just under 800 square feet. I have half the basement finished length wise, which would be half the north end, half the south and the whole east wall.
We have been getting record rainfalls for 2 months now in my part of iowa, and luckily until today no water. Finally some relief in sight after tomorrow. The ground is literally an over full sponge right now. I checked today and I had some water along the WEST wall, and through hairline cracks in the floor on the unfinished side.
Obviously this is ground water. I don't know anything about sump pumps. I do know that the proper way would be to tear up along the walls, around the perimeter and put drains in. I don't have the money for that (and wont drop a fortune into a small house I wont be living in for a very long time).
Can I benefit from just cutting a hole somewhere in the floor, guessing on the side or corner I have the most water, and just putting a sump in there? A buddy of mine suggested that. He said "just dig a hole for a sump pit and put a pump in there, that'll take care if your ground water "
So basically, will digging a sump pit without perimeter drains help at all? Basically just something to expel the soaked up ground water?
Pics below are the water in the crack in the floor and against the wall where it meets the floor
