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Minimum Culvert Depth

Ben333

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Joined
Nov 4, 2024
Messages
6
I need to install a culvert at the entrance of my new lot. Only constraint I am given is 15" min ID. Going with dual wall corrugated plastic. Due to the angle, pitch, etc. of the existing ditch and surrounding ground, it will only have about 3" of fill on top (not the standard 12"). To install it with 12" coverage would create a sort of mound to drive over. Has anyone here actually installed a 15" ID dual wall culvert with only a few inches of fill on top and had construction vehicles (well drilling rig, dump trucks with bulldozer trailers, ect.) drive over it? Hoping to find someone who has real world experience with this and not speculation based on internet searches. Thanks!
 
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PopcornSutton

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Jun 10, 2024
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778
Location
Northern Tip of VA
The lay of the land on either side will dictate where the pipe needs to be. You don;t want your pipe a low spot. I've seen culvert pipes almost bare on top. If you can get 3" of coverage, I would go with it, unless you expect heavier traffic than normal vehicles.
That's why they make elliptical pipe, interior capacity but much shallower.
 

mike93lx

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Dec 9, 2013
Messages
37,406
Location
Richmond, VA
How about two smaller culverts? If the 15" diameter important or the cross sectional area?

Two 12" culverts will flow more than a single 15"
 

jblnut

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Jan 17, 2015
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In the Middle of MN
Going with dual wall corrugated plastic .......
There are multiple different grades of plastic pipe. Some will collapse with the loads listed below and others will hold up better when installed improperly. What type of pipe or where were you going to get it ?

I have installed ADS HP Storm Dual Wall pipe in a bunch of places and it's really great stuff. The "regular" black dual wall plastic stuff isn't nearly as tough/durable/whatever you want to call it.


Has anyone here actually installed a 15" ID dual wall culvert with only a few inches of fill on top and had construction vehicles (well drilling rig, dump trucks with bulldozer trailers, ect.) drive over it?
I installed a temp 12" dual wall ADS N-12 pipe as a culvert with 4" (roughly) of top fill that was properly compacted like it was supposed to be during installation and it made a morning of 12yd loaded trucks going over it before it gave up and caved in. If I had to guess I'd say around 40 trucks went over it loaded and back unloaded before I had to dig it out and fill the trench with dirt so the trucks could keep going.

A safe rule of thumb to follow is to have an absolute minimum of half the diameter of the pipe in fill above the pipe.

You may get away with it but someone will drop into it eventually. If it's passenger cars/trucks and smaller it'll likely be fine for a long time.
 
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Ben333

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Joined
Nov 4, 2024
Messages
6
A lot of great advice here. I am aware properly packing the backfill layers will provide more strength, in that light, has anyone tried back filling with cement? Something simple like post setting cement, that would really shore things up, but I guess a heavy load would still punch through the top.

Been looking for steel culvert, hard to find anyone nearby who sells it without special ordering it in
 
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Ben333

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Joined
Nov 4, 2024
Messages
6
There are multiple different grades of plastic pipe. Some will collapse with the loads listed below and others will hold up better when installed improperly. What type of pipe or where were you going to get it ?

I have installed ADS HP Storm Dual Wall pipe in a bunch of places and it's really great stuff. The "regular" black dual wall plastic stuff isn't nearly as tough/durable/whatever you want to call it.



I installed a temp 12" dual wall ADS N-12 pipe as a culvert with 4" (roughly) of top fill that was properly compacted like it was supposed to be during installation and it made a morning of 12yd loaded trucks going over it before it gave up and caved in. If I had to guess I'd say around 40 trucks went over it loaded and back unloaded before I had to dig it out and fill the trench with dirt so the trucks could keep going.

A safe rule of thumb to follow is to have an absolute minimum of half the diameter of the pipe in fill above the pipe.

You may get away with it but someone will drop into it eventually. If it's passenger cars/trucks and smaller it'll likely be fine for a long time.
I was thinking ADS's N-12 dual wall culvert, it is HDPE
 
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larry_g

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Apr 28, 2007
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16,872
Location
oregon
Does this install have to be permeant? In other words can you put something in that is temporary till the heavy work is done and then go back and put in what the county wants. Can you get ahold of some heavy timbers or steel plate to bridge across the culvert during the building process? Ask the well driller or cement company if they have something to spread the load when accessing your property. Pictures and location might help. Makes some difference if you are in snow and freezing weather doing this or the sunny south.

lg
no neat sig line
 

Firebrick43

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Joined
May 12, 2015
Messages
13,992
Location
West central Indiana
A lot of great advice here. I am aware properly packing the backfill layers will provide more strength, in that light, has anyone tried back filling with cement? Something simple like post setting cement, that would really shore things up, but I guess a heavy load would still punch through the top.

Been looking for steel culvert, hard to find anyone nearby who sells it without special ordering it in
You could pour proper concrete around it and with proper reinforcement and 5" of concrete over the top it would survive most any traffic.

Steel culvert is going to be probably cheaper however. Plastic culvert at a shallow depth is an accident waiting to happen.
 

carlaisle

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May 14, 2022
Messages
365
When do you need to install this culvert? A bulldozer and well drilling rig won't need a culvert to get on to your lot. My inclination would be to make the ditch passable for the necessary traffic for now and install whatever culvert is needed after the heavy traffic has passed.

How much water does this ditch actually carry? The culvert needs to have a 15" cross sectional area, but does anything say the bottom of that culvert needs to be flush with the bottom of the ditch? You could just install it 5" low. The bottom will fill up quickly and then what's left will work just fine. If whomever is required to sign off on the install disapproves, I'd probably go with concrete. 3" of cover might work for passenger vehicle traffic, but it won't survive much abuse.
 

john.k

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Jun 4, 2024
Messages
980
New plastic drain is costly especially big sizes ,I d look in FB/MP for some dug up heavy wall drainpipe ,either concrete or steel ,and use that....steel can have trucks driving over exposed top ...........sure it will rust out in 30 or 40 years
 
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Ben333

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Nov 4, 2024
Messages
6
Does this install have to be permeant? In other words can you put something in that is temporary till the heavy work is done and then go back and put in what the county wants. Can you get ahold of some heavy timbers or steel plate to bridge across the culvert during the building process? Ask the well driller or cement company if they have something to spread the load when accessing your property. Pictures and location might help. Makes some difference if you are in snow and freezing weather doing this or the sunny south.

lg
no neat sig line
Thank you, great idea. I could 'mound' it up and then remove it later
 
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Ben333

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Joined
Nov 4, 2024
Messages
6
When do you need to install this culvert? A bulldozer and well drilling rig won't need a culvert to get on to your lot. My inclination would be to make the ditch passable for the necessary traffic for now and install whatever culvert is needed after the heavy traffic has passed.

How much water does this ditch actually carry? The culvert needs to have a 15" cross sectional area, but does anything say the bottom of that culvert needs to be flush with the bottom of the ditch? You could just install it 5" low. The bottom will fill up quickly and then what's left will work just fine. If whomever is required to sign off on the install disapproves, I'd probably go with concrete. 3" of cover might work for passenger vehicle traffic, but it won't survive much abuse.
That is good. I am not familiar with well digging rigs and their ground clearance. My little midsize pickup crosses the ditch with little problem as long as have it in 4WD. A car won't make it at all. But this is good stuff, if I can make with my truck I am sure a well drilling rig can with no problem at all - probably sounds dumb that I didn't think about that, but I don't do this stuff every day.

I think that is my answer: Put in the culvert, cover it the best I can, it will be fine for residential use. Well rig and others by pass culver and drive through the ditch. I'll cut a temp road in for them and let it grow shut when done.
 
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Ben333

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Nov 4, 2024
Messages
6
A lot of great help here guys, thanks! I think I got the answers I need.
 

captaindiode

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Joined
Jul 8, 2013
Messages
370
Location
NC
In North Carolina, the DOT will install a driveway culvert in the right of way if the homeowner purchases the pipe. Might be worth checking with your local department of transportation.
 
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