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Water line to barn

chadwick02

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Joined
Nov 6, 2017
Messages
11
Location
Amherst Ma
Hi Guys - taking a quick break from garage construction to divert attention to a solar electric project. Massachusetts has great rebates on solar electric systems that end this coming spring, and I just received approval to put a decent sized system on my barn out back. This project will require trenching electric from the top of the property, where the house/garage/main utility service are [going to be] down to the barn. The previous owner had this barn built, but never actually ran electric service too it, about 350' feet from the house to the barn. See picture.


Approval for this project came much sooner than I suspected, and I'd like to get this rolling now, rather than early spring when were in a major time crunch. I have plenty of time this weekend to do the trenching work, and were waiting for concrete to cure on the garage project, so I dont have much else I can do project wise. A mild fall means the ground isnt frozen, yet, but were on borrowed time I'd like to trench THIS weekend and get that done.

Electrical code says a minimum of 18" deep for the electric conduit, we'll be running 2" conduit for the 200a service as well as two 1" conduits with strings for anything in the future. Conduit is cheap and I'd rather not dig another trench to run phone/cable/internet later on. Gonna put an outdoor 120v outlet half way down the run in the middle of the field too - might put a garden there someday, electric fence charger, yard light, power tools, battery charger for the tractor who knows its easy and cheap to to do now when running the power.

I'm open to any and all suggestions or thoughts in terms of running services down to the barn, but the point of this thread actually has nothing to do with electricity....:

Should I run a water line down to the barn as well?? If so, is now the time?



Pros:
1 - It'd be nice to have water in the barn! Why?? Well, I dont really know. Wash sink, potential bathroom... Unsure of the barns ultimate use, now its mostly storage and some shop space, but water will always (someday...) be beneficial, right??. 2nd floor of the barn is partially finished and could become offices, a gym/workout room, bar and pool table, wood shop. Possibilities are endless.

2- Our plan is to possibly plant a garden in the middle of the field. Could put a frost free hydrant half way down for irrigation purposes.

Cons:
1 - there is no septic or sewer in the barn. We'd have to put a system in, or potentially pump up to the septic here at the house (its possible and the septic is sized big enough, but not ideal). So, while running a water line now is cheap and relatively easy, without a septic (or alternatives) our uses are limited currently.
2 - using well water for irrigation is nice... but do we want to use our well (which has good flow) as a source of irrigation, and risk potential issues? For some reason that has me not feeling great.
3 - electric needs to be 18", but water line needs to be below the frost line... 36-48(??) inches. Renting an 18-24" trencher is easy and cheap, renting one that'll go 4' is looking like a 6-$800 adventure.


Someone talk me off the ledge here please. Everyone I've talked too (friends, family, contractors) say drop water line in now, its easy to go a little deeper and then it'll be done). Before we poured the garage floor I stubbed a 1" water line out, so thats all set ready to roll.

Utilities sharing trenches: NEC has no direction (code doesn't say it cant be done). Electrical inspector said ask the board of health (oversees water), board of health says its up to the electrical inspector. Electrician shrugged. If no one says no, I wont push it, i'll do it. I'd love for someone to say yes sharing the trench is fine...

Options:

1 - Just run electric and forget water line. 18" deep, small walk behind trencher, done.

2 - Shallow trench as above, but throw the plastic water line in for fun. Not below frost line, but will serve as a good waterline 3 seasons out of the year, barn isnt insulated or heated regularly anyhow so water will need to be turned off and bled before freezing weather.

3 - Do it all, dig 42" down with a big trenching machine, burry it all, know the water line is there in the future. I've got the time to do it this weekend, I've got a machine on deposit, water line expense is a couple hundred bucks total. Not gonna break the bank. Might not ever use it, but wont regret not doing it(?). The bigger ride on tracked trencher sure will be much more fun to operate than a small walk behind, and my guess is a track machine going deeper will probably prove to be almost as easy as a smaller shallower machine. From digging foundations and footings, so far the soil has been great (even though we are on the side of a mountain).


One more thought in the back of my mind: Shallow well / hand driven point well (basically 1.25" heavy duty steel pipe that is driven by hand down into the ground typically 15-25'). Not usually the quality or quantity of water of a typical deep well, but usually plenty good for irrigation or animal water, and my guess is it'd be fine for drinking too). Gravity drain back so they work year round. Hand pump (no electricity) or electric pump would work similar to regular home well water. I have not tried one on my property yet, so were not positive it'll work, however I know of plenty of households within a few miles that have had good success so I think I would too. I do really like the idea of having a 2nd source of water other than my primary deep well, just in case... And I like the idea of running garden/lawn irrigation off that pump (if it'll handle it) too, rather than working my deep well pump hard. I could put one at the barn and one in the middle of the field, if I really wanted too.

That was way too long a write up for a really simple question.
Sorry. Open to everyone's thoughts about both water and electric. And really, I've spent way too much time thinking about this...

Thanks
Chad
 

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ard

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Feb 16, 2015
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Sierra Foothills... California
350 ft with a walk behind???

Rent the biggest trencher that will fit or you can haul...

Go deep, drop the water line in. Even going twice as deep, I'd bet the big trencher will still be half the time, or less.
 

matt_i

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Mar 14, 2008
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SE Michigan
I wouldn't be so unhappy about having to blow out a shallow irrigation line once a year. Just set it up so your air compressor can hook to the system.

I plan to cut mine in with a single point moldboard plow.

The yard hydrants are good but need some prep. My opinion is they should have a metal elbow on the bottom (brass, copper, ss, etc) and have a pea gravel "pocket" that's inside a filter-fabric envelope (same thing as a "sock" that goes over pierced corrugated plastic tubing to prevent it from filling with mud)

Its kind of a drag to refill a deep trench as there will suddenly be so much more earth than came out of the trench. It would be worthwhile to also rent a jumping jack and pack it down, just to avoid having to haul off the excess, and then haul it back in a year after everything settles and you now have a ditch. Usual care for putting "soft" fill around waterlines so they aren't pierced by sharp stones. If the soil is rocky down there you may need to truck in coarse sand...
 

Skyking1992

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Sep 16, 2006
Messages
475
I ran water, gas, and electricity in one trench. I rented a mini excavator (track hoe). Went down about 36 inches. Water went in first, surrounded by sand. Gas and electricity higher up and well spaced. No problems so far.
 

ng8264723

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Aug 28, 2006
Messages
732
Location
Oakham MA
I have a small building in Ma I put up. I brought water to it as well. It was about 200 feet. I did not want to heat the structure so I used yard hydrant. These allow you to get water to the barn but not worry about freezing. Once installed you are all set! I you choose to heat it then add a urinal later and a sink once the inspectors have left......
Do a dry well and call it a day..........
 

ambenz

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NW Chicago Suburbs
....It would be worthwhile to also rent a jumping jack and pack it down, just to avoid having to haul off the excess, and then haul it back in a year after everything settles and you now have a ditch....
Best advice and money well spent! I tried to compact my trench with a lot of water, a 4x8 sheet and my astro van...not good. I put my property electricity from the pole and my natural gas line from the house in the same trench, wish I did water too....then again I probable wouldn't use it as my garage isn't big enough for a bathroom.
That is a long run ...good luck!
 

kmacht

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Connecticut
In ma you will have to go down 48" with the water line to prevent freezing. Most rental trenches go down only 3 feet and that is if you don't hit rock. A mini excavator is a better idea.
 

ard

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Sierra Foothills... California
but water line needs to be below the frost line... 36-48(??) inches.

One comment- your county should have a published chart on the frost depth. Either a county wide statement or a may with iso-contours. Dont guess



Edit: On compaction...if it is just meandering down an open field, I wouldnt give a **** about a dip showing up a few years down the road.... Id fill it a bit, run the truck or tractor over it for a few trips, repeat. Leave a bit of a mound...and enjoy life. In X years, you'll be doing something with a tractor and can grade it smooth them...
 
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chadwick02

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Nov 6, 2017
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Location
Amherst Ma
Thanks Guys! I've got a hold on a Vermeer PTX44 - its a 49hp, 44" ride on trencher. Pretty much the biggest I can find within 100 miles, called over half a dozen rental places. So either there's not much of a market for a deep trencher, the liability/damage for the rental places is too great, or excavators are doing most of the work. For this project that machine will get us plenty deep! And yes, probably be a much better option than a smaller walk behind.

Didnt think of compacting the trench too much, figured Id push it in with the trencher blade, or if I ran out of time i'd fill it in with my tractor loader bucket or rear blade. Or snowplow? And drive over it a bunch. Jumping jack is a good recommendation too, I'd rather not end up with a big swale down the edge of the driveway.

Thanks guys! Think I'm just gonna do it as deep as I reasonably can! Maybe drop an inch of corse sand in the trench if it looks like sharp rocks could damage water line, throw conduits in, and push it back over hopefully all in the same weekend.

I'll keep ya posted, and I'm open to any last minute thoughts or ideas on what you'd do!

C
 
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rburke65

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Canfield, Ohio
Just trench down 36" and run a water line and be happy. Now is the time. You will love having the water there. Power washer, drinking, hosing off the mower.....how about a fire? Just do it.
 

bob15

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Dec 8, 2011
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Northeasten, CT
Is the building going to be heated? If not, make sure you put a drain valve to drain it for the winter months because if your barn is unheated, the pipe coming up through the floor will freeze solid.

A second well wouldn't hurt for irrigation purposes.

Look at driplines for irrigation ideas. They also use the least amount of water. https://www.dripworks.com/
 

OH_Varmntr

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Apr 2, 2017
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Ohio
Buy once, cry once. Rent the ride on trencher, drop your water line in, run your conduit and wire, and even if you don't hook the water up for a few years, at least it's in, and you won't have to worry about forgetting to shut the water off and blow the line out in the winter.

Do you really wan't the possibility of forgetting and flooding your barn?
 

TractorJeff

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Dec 8, 2013
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Elkhorn, WI
I put the water line in and everything else on top. Heap the dirt over it. The winter frost and snow will settle it a lot! The following summer it will settle even more. After a year it will be pretty much level! Put a hydrant down at the Barn, no worries about freezing but will always have good drinking water!
 
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chadwick02

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Nov 6, 2017
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Location
Amherst Ma
Thanks guys! Getting the trencher tomorrow at noon, hope to trench tomorrow from 2 till dark, and then saturday morning, drop all pipes in and cover over. Supposed to get 3+ inches of snow coming in saturday afternoon... UGH ONE MORE DAY!!!!

Thanks!
 

kbs2244

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Nov 11, 2006
Messages
14,065
When I refilled my trench I soaked it every 3 inches,
It lowered the height a lot.
It took 3 days but, in the end I had no "hump" even though there was now a 4 inch pipe down there.
 

callcoy

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Nov 14, 2010
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Nashville
Sorry I didn't see this post till tonight, if you needed a sewer connection in the future you could have pumped from the barn and used the trench for the line. There are systems available that will pump different heads and different runs. Mine was rated to use a 1 1/2" line I am using 2" to make it even more efficient.
 
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