ElectraRider
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2010
- Messages
- 374
- City
- Colorado Springs Co.
- Vehicle Year
- 1989 ,2000
- Transmission
- Manual
In Colorado we bury our water lines 6 foot deep man yours is a piece cake.
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Ya, I love Colorado. Beautiful state. But that right there tells you how cold it gets.In Colorado we bury our water lines 6 foot deep man yours is a piece cake.
I was kinda questioning your measurements on that fitting, glad you double checked and it all worked out!
If you really want to, you can do most of the work above ground and just drop it in the trench after all the joints are sealed. I use sticks, 2x4's and shovel handles across the ditch to keep everything high. Then just pull the supports out and let drop in. Works great with PVC.When it rains it pours.
It stormed yesterday and now my waterline is under water. I'm probably not going to be able to start replacing it until Monday.![]()
They actually make digging spades for jackhammer. But they're more heavy duty than that.I came across a solution to the “it’s too hard to dig a hole” issues posted earlier…
View attachment 107460
I've dug just over 40-feet with another 30 feet to go.
I found a check valve on the 3/8" line that goes to the shop where it connects to the 3/4" line. You can see the 3/4" check valve in the libe right before all if this. Do I really need to have a check valve on this line going to the shop if I plan to replace it with a manual valve?