gilr
Well-known member
How about an update, it has been a long time......
I hope our friend Sparky is doing well and is just too busy to fill us in.Sparkynutz
Last Activity: 03-21-2018



Sparky lives!
Love the grading between the two yards!
And inside the garage looks really good too.
Is there any construction going on nearby where they are doing concrete? Maybe you could ask them to tie you on to that job, "while they are there"?
Good to hear from you, it’s amazing what you have accomplished
One other thing I forgot to mention. Every single wall has one hairline crack in the middle. Luckily I put 2 coats of foundation coating on outside prior to backfilling. I'm pretty sure it's due to the fact exterior is back filled and inside is not with all the pressure inward these last few months. Hopefully it doesn't get worse and filling inside neutralizes the pressure once I get a chance to fill and compact.



From what you have said about your area and the problems finding concrete guys... you should open a concrete business, maybe run a pumper truck!so as soon as she can find a job with benefits I'm gonna find a day job or start my own business.
Sounds like you passed the big test with flying colors. It's not often that storms like that come along, but I'm sure it was great to see how well all of your work has paid off...well except for all the stress and hassle that comes from being without power and needing to move water by hand. But the garage is bone dry, I can't imagine how bad it would've been otherwise.Last few days has been a real test.
My city was declared an emergency after massive storms and rain for days and days. Yesterday had just short of a tornado with trees down all over. Power off for 4 hours to over 15 hours now and still off for friends of mine out of town with a tree on power line to their house. My sump crock in house was within inches of top with wife and kids using buckets garbage cans and pitchers bailing water. I was at work when it hit. A normal 5 minute drive between work and home took over 20 because of all the flooded roads and downed trees. I got a generator out and spare pumps just in time to keep water from overflowing crock into basement. My neighbor across street said his backyard was so flooded the water was coming in at the sill plate where his house meets his basement.
My regrading work kept all the standing water far enough from house that only spot it came in was drain tile to sump crock. I was a lucky one. The garage on the other hand wasn't even a worry. Not a drop of water from what I could tell. The previous hairline cracks are now bigger. One being about 1/16" but there wasn't moisture coming into them from what I could tell to lowest part I could see backfilled on interior. The closest standing water was about 10ft+ away from garage. The drain in my front yard and storm sewer itself couldn't keep up with water almost as high as highest I've evee seen it. About 5 hours after storm my power came back on and my yard was about 90% drained. Water into sump crock had slowed to only cycling every 1:22 on my normal pump. When I initially got generator going I had one small spare pump running continuous and was alternating another spare pump with normal plumbed pump so that I didnt burn them out. It took over an hour pumping before I got sump crock below the drain tile coming into basement at which time I still had one pump running continuous and second pump cycling every 14 seconds.
I'm so thankful for having spare pumps and a generator as well has not having to worry one bit about the mess I would have had in garage if I didnt raise it.
Hopefully the storms are done for a while and this prepared us for next time. My wife and kids sure stepped it up and we were able to keep basement dry.
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After thinking about it more I'm going to install a 12v circuit in a few rooms of my basement and main upstairs hallway with LED emergency lights and a plug for a 12v pump at sump crock. I'll run the wires into garage with alligator clips that I can just back car or tractor into driveway and hook up quickly and easily to provide emergency power. I have a small motorcycle battery I keep charged to bring camping. I can rig up an auto charging circuit similar to what we have on emergency lights at work that turn 12v power on when 120v power is removed. I'll just keep the alligator clips on that battery circuit if power goes out giving us minimal time and lighting until I get a car, or generator running for any larger power needs. I'll definitely be more prepared if or when there is a next time.All the work was worth it! Congratulations on passing a stress test.
Now you need a battery backup on those sump pumps so they will operate without the generator.
After thinking about it more I'm going to install a 12v circuit in a few rooms of my basement and main upstairs hallway with LED emergency lights and a plug for a 12v pump at sump crock. I'll run the wires into garage with alligator clips that I can just back car or tractor into driveway and hook up quickly and easily to provide emergency power. I have a small motorcycle battery I keep charged to bring camping. I can rig up an auto charging circuit similar to what we have on emergency lights at work that turn 12v power on when 120v power is removed. I'll just keep the alligator clips on that battery circuit if power goes out giving us minimal time and lighting until I get a car, or generator running for any larger power needs. I'll definitely be more prepared if or when there is a next time.
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Since you have a tractor look into PTO mounted generators. They are large and cheap, and who doesn't like AC and heat during a power outage!
The previous hairline cracks are now bigger.
Not sure what caused it but in a weeks time the crack did double in width. I can't really do anything about it and the fact I put 2x as much rebar in wall as required shouldn't hurt keeping it together to an extent. At this point cracks or not I just want a place to store my stuff and work on things.Do you think this happened during the rain? Are you sure it happened or might it just be worrying? (The rebar you put in should keep everything tight.)
I actually used extra thick expansion joint foam instead of typical sill seal foam to make up for any uneven spots in the concrete. The sill is actually treated lumber. Unfortunately the nails previous owner/ builder used are just coated nailgun nails. Probably the weakpoint in the whole thing if nails ever rust or corrode away.Did you use any sill foam between your bottom plate and the stem wall? From the pictures they don't appear to be pressure treated but i could be wrong?
Not sure what caused it but in a weeks time the crack did double in width. I can't really do anything about it and the fact I put 2x as much rebar in wall as required shouldn't hurt keeping it together to an extent. At this point cracks or not I just want a place to store my stuff and work on things.
House went up $40k and my share of taxes went from about $4600 a year to $5700. Its appraised at $20k more than I paid and I paid way too much looking into how much I blew to get this garage even useable. I have a meeting on 6th to contest it. Hopefully it goes well. I'm going to have a hard time keeping a cool head. I'm going to tell them I'll gladly sell it to them for what they appraised it at and walk away. I planned on living here the next 15-20 years but if things don't change tax wise what's the point? Any tips on how to get things lowered?
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