My NEW Shop FLOODED! - Here's what happened (we had to start over)

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 27. 08. 2022
  • Full shop tour and updates! Unfortunately during the construction process our new shop flooded.
    Check out our other CZcams Channel:
    / vicegripgarage
    Merchandise can be found at:
    www.vicegripgarage.com

Komentáře • 3,4K

  • @ralphh3041
    @ralphh3041 Před rokem +508

    *****Derek, I was in the engineering business 40 years. That ditch you put on the road might work on a small rain but will eventually silt in. Filling it with rock has cut your water volume handling in half. It would have been better to not fill it with rock. A dirt berm at the top of your bank with a ditch in front of it would do a much better job of diverting the water away from your hillside. Another big rain will blow right over the top of that rock ditch. As an example, you need a 24" pipe to adequately drain a 20 acre field, so if you have 60 acres draining in you direction you are going to continue to have issues without proper ditches and diversions. (10'w x 3'd)... MY advice, Have a good licensed civil engineer come out to your place and pay him to advise you what needs to be done. It will be money well spent. They do this work every day and can save you money and grey hairs. I felt terrible for you and the damage that resulted. Hopefully what you have put in place can still be utilized. Love your channels and your family. Good luck brother.

    • @phillbob5336
      @phillbob5336 Před rokem +36

      Agreed 100%.

    • @joeyleclaire
      @joeyleclaire Před rokem +27

      Totally agree! I spent a few years doing landscaping, and that single drain tile does not look adequate at all for the amount of water he was describing

    • @WrenchRepairsAndProspecting
      @WrenchRepairsAndProspecting Před rokem +11

      Completely agree

    • @scha0786
      @scha0786 Před rokem +13

      This guy nailed it

    • @stephenhall5694
      @stephenhall5694 Před rokem +12

      Amen. Keeping what you’ve already done, get that mud “road” seeded asap with fast-establishing grass. A ditch full of rock will silt up with next big rain, and even the Fall leaves will silt it up over a few years. God bless you and family.

  • @jackaffeldt
    @jackaffeldt Před rokem +307

    I do drainage for a living, and one thing I absolutely recommend is a good old fashioned ditch. It’s easy for a French drain to get clogged with fines or get overwhelmed. With a ditch, you won’t be dealing with blockages. Water doesn’t flow uphill!

    • @jimthode
      @jimthode Před rokem +28

      I agree. The ditches with riprap may work for awhile but over time they will clog up with soil, leaves, vegetation and such. I like low side sloped swales that are properly graded for the long term solution to surface water drainage.

    • @BrokenRRT
      @BrokenRRT Před rokem +15

      So many of us told him this when we saw it coming during the addition being built.
      It’s a shame it came to this

    • @jessietaylor2774
      @jessietaylor2774 Před rokem +12

      I’d say your right fellas a burm to divert the water would probably work a little better in my opinion… also we did all see this coming but at the end of the day we make mistakes and oversight to learn

    • @faststang85
      @faststang85 Před rokem +13

      @@BrokenRRT oh well he's rich he can afford to do it again, not like us who couldn't afford to screw it up. I made some mistakes when i had my house built and its cost me a ton of money and time to make it right.

    • @Lumpygrits76
      @Lumpygrits76 Před rokem +8

      With a building on a hillside that could potentially flood, I was also thinking a simple floor drain running along the wall closet to the hill would be a good idea. Obviously would be easier and cheaper to do before the concrete is poured

  • @highway7562
    @highway7562 Před rokem +30

    As an old, retired engineer, I echo what Ralph says below. Several terraces in the 60 acre field will do more to eliminate the problem in the future than the rock and underdrain pipe you have installed. Terraces always work and require very little or no maintenance. You also mentioned establishing vegetation on the bare soil, which will help.

    • @shade38211
      @shade38211 Před rokem +2

      Live next to 20-30 acre farm that has had rain catch Terrances put by army corp of engineers. Must have been done in 50’s. Even they overflow. When I bought my property that borders the field the water broke thru the sid3 onto my property. Just put clay on my property border to keep his water on his property. He has had to repair the mounds a few times and is pissed I blocked his water. Would suggest anyone playing with runoff be careful as could turn into a lawsuit from down neighbors. Even recording this might not be good for his insurance company might take note. Storms go by weather events in years. Always advantageous to build on high ground.

  • @LarryThomas-mi4jc
    @LarryThomas-mi4jc Před 6 měsíci +2

    Had a massive tree (neighbors) fall on my 24X24garage. We put it back, paid for a second massive tree removal in her yard (she has no money). “Weeping may endure for the night, but joy cometh in the morning’ love your attitude!

  • @phillbob5336
    @phillbob5336 Před rokem +301

    Bummer. I remember thinking this would be a problem when watching the grading and slab pour videos. I deal with this problem every day as earthmoving and road construction is what I do for a living. This is probably too late (its never too late) but take this into consideration.... The drain system you are installing is only a temporary solution. Especially with no filter fabric. What happens is the fine particles from the dirt and roots from vegetation eventually work their way into the voids of the rock, eventually making it impermeable. The other problem i have with your new system is the use of the flexible black perforated pipe. With no filter cloth used, there is a very high chance dirt will eventually clog the pipe. I always use a hard pipe this way a drain snake and or drain jetter machine wont damage and collapse the pipe. The solution i recommend is a concrete ditch at the top of the slope, and a smaller one at the Toe of slope. Place a 2' band of rip rap at the leading edge of the ditch and that will help keep dirt out of the ditch. With the concrete ditch, you can shovel out the sediment therefore making it a lifetime solution. For stuff like this I always spend the extra money. The peace of mind when your away, that there is absolutely no way water can make it into the shop is worth it. -Phill

    • @missingremote4388
      @missingremote4388 Před rokem +6

      Like they do in Japan - for landslide prevention 'he should concrete the whole slope at a 45 ° angle

    • @patrickwhelan5703
      @patrickwhelan5703 Před rokem +30

      you think the drainage people/architect would have mentioned the sock.....just sayin'

    • @workonitm8
      @workonitm8 Před rokem +6

      Very good ideas and I had also thought about a ditch along the top of the slope.

    • @andrewmantle7627
      @andrewmantle7627 Před rokem +24

      @@patrickwhelan5703 I am constantly amazed that drainage people don't know to do this. You put the perf on top of structural landscape fabric on the VERY BOTTOM of your ditch; cover it with drain rock (or crushed) and wrap the WHOLE THING in fabric! Please people! It's permanent and functional. Maybe not permanent, but years and years. Clay like Derek has here will plug a system in less than five years.

    • @MrLotrecht
      @MrLotrecht Před rokem

      I also have written it! Not just that the guys bring in the concrect without condence it! But he had have his little sea down by the cars this would bring the alarmclocks to ring! But i am an architect he is not-so i am from germany there we see this things in a lot of ways different than americans did! Also they put the trainige system into this clay boddom after some months this trainage is closed with mud! The same he did on the top of the hill he need down at the building too! and than he need deep to train deep holes maybe 8-10 feet deep with 8feet in diameter ,,,, but without a filterflies so we call it all the clay will clog the drainage!

  • @johnremington5390
    @johnremington5390 Před rokem +197

    I would add a separate pipe that is solid for your downspouts. It looks like with the amount of rain you get your new pipe will fill up with just the downspout water, leaving no room for the other ground water.

    • @jamieforrester7108
      @jamieforrester7108 Před rokem +19

      Yep here on the very rainy west coast all new builds have separate lines. One for downspouts, one for drainage against the foundation. Heavy downpours can overwhelm the system otherwise

    • @Mikefngarage
      @Mikefngarage Před rokem +8

      Yea the only thing I was thinking about if there is some mud that seeps through those holes it will create enough flow to go out that drain.

    • @sonytony3060
      @sonytony3060 Před rokem +8

      Why don't you build a concrete drain instead of using pipes?

    • @CB-eu3lz
      @CB-eu3lz Před rokem +5

      4" low-grade glue up long turn ells separate pipe for downspouts the system as it is shown is adding tremendous amount of water into your foundation/footing drain .

    • @CB-eu3lz
      @CB-eu3lz Před rokem +4

      Exactly ,I have done this type of work in Washington State for 40 years and you definitely should use 4

  • @Cincinnatijames
    @Cincinnatijames Před rokem +10

    When I saw how the shop was butted up against a hill, my first thought was, "that's gonna flood." Didn't expect it to happen so soon. Used pallet racks can be had pretty cheap. Nothing should be one the floor, cardboard wicks up moisture out of the concrete.

  • @scottm344
    @scottm344 Před rokem +18

    Man out of every channel I watch on here this has got to be one of my favorites. This guy and his family are just so nice and you can tell they really do appreciate all their fans and subscribers. They have worked so hard and imo totally deserve all they have, congratulations on it all.

  • @archiiebarrett
    @archiiebarrett Před rokem +160

    That perforated piping should be wrapped in fabric before it's buried to prevent clogging and rooting. Also make sure the highest point is lower than your lowest grade on the garage. Also, you should have Y pipe cleanouts for your downspouts so you can wash them out if they clog.

    • @allanperry6507
      @allanperry6507 Před rokem +11

      You can get perforated pipe with a sock on it that is almost like a real heavy pair of winter nylons the ladies might wear here in Canadia. Smiles 😃 from Canada 🇨🇦

    • @High_Caliber
      @High_Caliber Před rokem +12

      Yeah, was thinking same thing, should have the sock...there's a lot of fine silt.soil there that will fill that big O pretty quick in heavy rainfall. Learned that the hard way myself...

    • @bobbyd1478
      @bobbyd1478 Před rokem +22

      Construction of the building was incorrect to begin with. He's right next to a mountain. His concrete foundation should have included 12-inch concrete Rat-Walls. What he's doing now is temporary fix. He has no choice but to install retaining wall now. We learn from our mistakes.

    • @virus56777
      @virus56777 Před rokem +5

      Nope. The fabric will plug up

    • @BrianMcKinny
      @BrianMcKinny Před rokem +1

      @@bobbyd1478 I agree. I thought that when I was watching the previous videos of the construction processes that he shouldn't have skimped on putting up a retaining wall - water only knows one thing... it wants to flow to the lowest point, and he's on the side of a hill... I had a similar problem with my parent's house in Arkansas, where their garage would flood every time it rained, and it wasn't because of bad construction - it was bad engineering, and the plot where the house was built wasn't properly graded or setup for drainage. We ended up having to dig a French drain around the side of the garage which it was experiencing the flood water entering, and then we extended the drain down to the lowest point of their yard. It was expensive, but necessary to repair it, or all the flooding was going to destroy their garage in short order. Sorry for you guys having to experience this! Don't let it disappoint you or discourage you - we love what you guys are doing and support your efforts!

  • @TheBurnsStuff
    @TheBurnsStuff Před rokem +192

    I have a concern with your drainage. You shouldn't dump your gutters into the same pipes as yard drains. I would of ran a separate solid line for the gutters and keep the corrugated drain tile for the french drains. You have a lot of roof and terrain square footage for watershed. Not bashin on the setup and I know its too late by the time this video go up, just something to keep in mind.

    • @colliecollie6822
      @colliecollie6822 Před rokem +14

      I have always heard the same as well. Run the gutters separately into solid drain pipe and the ground drainage into the slotted.

    • @One-Crazy-Cat
      @One-Crazy-Cat Před rokem +6

      Yeah I can see that backing up in time.

    • @rebel3353
      @rebel3353 Před rokem +9

      on top of this......USE PVC!

    • @jo05dk
      @jo05dk Před rokem +6

      Far from an expert, but i was thinking the same thing.

    • @kodez79
      @kodez79 Před rokem +10

      That is absolutely correct. If the gutters are running at capacity, they will more than clog up the ground drainage, if anything they will due to gravity increase pressure and push more water back up the pipe.

  • @arrogantindustries9299
    @arrogantindustries9299 Před rokem +5

    I'm surprised the insurance covered this building.

  • @MrTedwal
    @MrTedwal Před rokem +3

    Just saw this video. I can totally relate to the flood. 20 years ago, I woke up to 5 inches of water in my basement. I know what you and Jessica went through in the process of moving, drying, and moving your stuff around. Kudos to Jessica for catching it early. Great job on the shop. Nice layout, lots of room for modification. Love the double hoist. Thought about a bedroom or a mezzanine above the shelter area. For those late nights and lucky guests. No matter what the subject, your videos are always worth the watch. Not a bad one yet. Good Karma.

  • @seismik9063
    @seismik9063 Před rokem +54

    I don't think they're "cheap" but Big Ass Fans provides a quality product, and they stand behind them. I believe their headquarters is in Kentucky. (Maybe an episode touring their production facility would help a guy get a discount)

    • @pileofstuff
      @pileofstuff Před rokem +12

      I've seen BigAssFans do product deals with several other youtubers. A channel as big as Derek's shouldn't have much trouble getting their attention.

    • @ericredbeard7009
      @ericredbeard7009 Před rokem +4

      We have these fans at work, they are great

    • @seismik9063
      @seismik9063 Před rokem +5

      I should add for Derek's benefit, they do allow censorship when needed for their advertising, so they would likely allow you to toy with the name in your own style, if you didn't want that on your channel. Big Donkey Twirlers lol

    • @ChinookBear
      @ChinookBear Před rokem +2

      Big ass fans are great. We have a huge one at work and can't even hear it run. Would be great for having on when making videos.

    • @crapschamp4206
      @crapschamp4206 Před 15 dny

      We had them at work on our docks they are huge.

  • @BainRacing134
    @BainRacing134 Před rokem +69

    Like others are saying, don't put your gutters into your foundation drain. Run the gutters underground in solid pipe and the foundation drain in perf pipe. PVC is more expensive but it's a lot cheaper than digging it up again if it ever gets clogged.

    • @jarrsong
      @jarrsong Před rokem +3

      Also noticed at the "T" connections they aren't radiused in the direction of flow. This could be an issue.

  • @chimera7817
    @chimera7817 Před rokem +2

    Keep these updates comin! It's nice to wind down and watch a feller make progress on his homestead.

  • @davidmott1969
    @davidmott1969 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Even as someone with just basic construction knowledge could see the entire building and land grading was prone to exactly what happened. I'm very sorry to see this and have experienced the same thing from winter flooding due to quick snow thaw. I would make sure as others have already said to cover all your bases to keep this from happening again. Wishing you the very best, great videos.

  • @troy510
    @troy510 Před rokem +53

    That cut bank behind your building still needs fabric below the rip-rap or all that clay is still going to wash out into your perforated drain and clog it up eventually. And ideally you want to stack that rip-rap from the bottom up on a slop that steep so the rock doesn't settle down over time. Also it is going to be a nightmare to maintain without fabric under it once weeds start growing in between the rip-rap. It's better to do that now or this will most likely happen again.
    I also agree with people saying you need to run your gutters on a separate drain. That's way too much water for only one 4" drain to handle! It's also a very bad idea to park a heavy RV over that shallow drain. It doesn't work at all when it's smashed. You need a heavy duty pipe for that if you plan on driving on it, or at least PVC schedule 40. But an RV still might even smash that. It will 100% smash that pipe you are using now.

  • @minnesotatomcat
    @minnesotatomcat Před rokem +79

    Yep that hillside behind made me nervous from the first time I seen it. I’ve seen the same thing happen several times. Gotta have a good tile/drain system when u got a shop like that on a side hill. The worst is getting all that mud off the floors and everything, I feel for u brother. Sometimes life decides our projects for us 👍

    • @waltermelyon4300
      @waltermelyon4300 Před rokem

      That hillside is very close and abrupt. Looks like he's fighting an uphill battle. Did he pull a permit and did it pass inspection?

    • @candle86
      @candle86 Před rokem

      I'd add an emergency sump system incase the drains get overwhelmed, a pump can do wonders to make the water move far faster than gravity

    • @jeremygourde9880
      @jeremygourde9880 Před rokem +3

      Really needs to have a concrete foundation wall on the back side of that building to help keep water from seeping under the sill plate and to have a very large French drain installed around the building that should catach and shed water away from the building

    • @kimchipig
      @kimchipig Před rokem +1

      @@waltermelyon4300 no permit necessary in Tennessee.

  • @occultustactical6138
    @occultustactical6138 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Wow. This is another side of you we never see. Makes me even more impressed in the way you do these revivals. We think you guys are the best and wish you luck.

  • @JRRott-mj5jq
    @JRRott-mj5jq Před 6 měsíci +1

    Derek I feel for ya bud. I really think it’s time you build shelves and get organized!! You gotta work smarter not harder bud.

  • @chidrole
    @chidrole Před rokem +14

    What your doing at the back of your shop with the weeping tile and the rip rap is not enough for all that water coming down from the hill! You should also dig a large swale behind the tree line and let it drain away from your shop!👍🇨🇦

  • @eformance
    @eformance Před rokem +48

    I recommend getting pallets to put stuff on. One, to prevent dampness due to concrete contact/water and Two, to make it easy to move stuff around with a pallet jack.

    • @iflifewaseasy
      @iflifewaseasy Před rokem +8

      Kinda everything in my reality is on wheels or pallets. A gal can't wait until there's a shop big enough to own a forklift again.

    • @throttlebottle5906
      @throttlebottle5906 Před rokem +1

      plastic pallets for sure!

    • @izzysvids
      @izzysvids Před rokem +2

      I worked in a major corporate Data Center and this was our rule as well. Never anything direction on the floor. Multiple reasons, as you stated.

  • @ELIRAXPRT
    @ELIRAXPRT Před rokem +5

    I'd throw a couple more drain tiles along side that one for more capacity. I'd also keep the gutters in a separate tile that isn't corrugated. Looking back, it would have been better to have a poured wall foundation along the hillside part

  • @bobbipson8906
    @bobbipson8906 Před rokem +1

    It's amazing how a place so big, begins to look small after getting your crap into it.

  • @aubcivil98
    @aubcivil98 Před rokem +15

    Civil engineer here…. you might think about adding a berm beyond your rip rap ditch up the hill in case the channel gets overwhelmed. Also, sod everything upstream of your riprap channel. Good luck! We sure enjoy your content. Sorry this happened. Looks like you have a good crew working on it.

    • @robin6564
      @robin6564 Před rokem +1

      Have to agree with berm. We had a bad flood here in SC and our property at bottom of hill. It was disaster. We built a berm really cheap and easy. It works amazingly. Nice grassy hill looks nice too. Would be great on your property. Considerably cheaper than what many others are suggesting.

    • @jasonfarrell3567
      @jasonfarrell3567 Před rokem +1

      Let's get together to solve this. The next big rain is going to take out his hill. Clay doesn't absorb water. He has a overland issue

    • @darrinrentruc6614
      @darrinrentruc6614 Před rokem

      American Here, I would just put a gutter on the bottom of the hill

  • @Challenged1
    @Challenged1 Před rokem +321

    As a licensed professional civil engineer, I can tell you this "fix" is going to fail. The french drain on the top of the hill is located too close to the slope. The slope is too steep and will become water logged by the french drain at which point is will slough off. NEVER use corrugated pipe to convey water long distances; always use smooth wall schedule 40. The corrugated pipe around your building is far too small. Each downspout should be on it's own pipe, and a separate pipe should be used with area drains behind your building to collect runoff.
    I'm a huge fan and don't want to see you go through this again.

    • @desertodavid
      @desertodavid Před rokem +10

      Nothing can stop climate change! Oh my God it's flooding! We're in a drought! We're all going to die,
      AGAIN?!!

    • @Hubjeep
      @Hubjeep Před rokem +27

      @@desertodavid Climate is cyclical! Some of the biggest floods happened 90 years ago!

    • @Hubjeep
      @Hubjeep Před rokem +7

      I'd say never use corrugated pipe, ever. I'm thinking all that new deep stone will slow the water enough to it makes it's way around the building.

    • @flyingcrocodile4630
      @flyingcrocodile4630 Před rokem +20

      You are trying to solve a surface water flow/control problem. Drains are not the way to go (Period). As you say, that drain is going to fill up with water and silt and end up causing a failure plane in the fill that he has stacked up behind the shed. He will soon find the hill has demolished his shed completely.
      First rule. The ground outside the slab should be at least 10 inches lower than the slab (with dirt/gravel ramps up to doors). Second rule is that the ground must be cut to form a really wide Over Land Flow Path (OLFP) with falls to the low side of the property (where previously uninterrupted surface water was going). The bigger the water flow you are dealing with, the wider and/or deeper the overland flow path needs to be. Looks like he needs at least 12 feet wide by 18" deep along the back of the shed, but can't fit that. He needs to cut the top off that fill/slope behind the shed (to stabilise it) and place the fill further upslope (30 to 40 feet) and use it to form a bund that will deflect the surface water (over the surface rather than in high maintenance drains) around the ends of the bund and the shed

    • @Challenged1
      @Challenged1 Před rokem +6

      @@flyingcrocodile4630 His problem is proximity to that tree row to make your plan work. I don't know if he owns the property behind it or not. If he does, it would work. If not, he doesn't have the room.

  • @CPTNSL0
    @CPTNSL0 Před rokem

    I'm really sorry to see that Derek. Having been through 3 floods myself, that feeling of just seeing everything going to the trash pile is just sickening. Best of luck to you and your family in the future. We had sewage and storm back up in our previous house twice - several feet both times. Destroyed basically everything. After the dam broke in Sanford a couple years ago, the basement in our new house also flooded - not nearly as bad as some, but enough to cause quite the trash heap. Just such a helpless feeling - you can't do anything to stop the flow, and can't make it go down any faster. Just have to sit there and watch it happen.

  • @b.neallee7042
    @b.neallee7042 Před rokem +1

    All derrick I'm so sorry to hear that. You were making so much progress . Wish we could help you. It hit 20 miles south of me in Apollo beach Florida. Keep the faith. You'll pull through and no one in your family got hurt. Neal

  • @mikemoore1821
    @mikemoore1821 Před rokem +25

    Just for future reference, if you pour a concrete stem-wall up against the back and side walls you'll not have that flooding inside again.
    Thnx for the update!

    • @ViceGripLodge
      @ViceGripLodge  Před rokem +13

      Should have!

    • @mikemoore1821
      @mikemoore1821 Před rokem +5

      I only know this because hindsight is 20/20, and i did it for clients during my construction career.
      Thnx again for the update, and sorry for you bad luck!

    • @TheSmreeder
      @TheSmreeder Před rokem

      @@ViceGripLodge ... On the fence posts a little 'round up' goes a long way , just dribble it on the posts and you can cut right up next to them w/ the mower... and please remember "We do it right Cuz We do it Twice" ... there is no shame in that.... Many Blessings , SMR

  • @Guysm1l3y
    @Guysm1l3y Před rokem +24

    Suggestion for the air compressor: an 8 hour timer on a solenoid. When you need air you hit the button and it stays open for 8 hours and then automatically closes. No more forgetting about it.

    • @throttlebottle5906
      @throttlebottle5906 Před rokem +1

      I keep forgetting my air line on, but I do turn the power off disconnect. but the hose or line would probably beat the garage apart before that 100+ gallon tank runs out 😵. lol

  • @Scuba8way2many
    @Scuba8way2many Před 11 měsíci

    I moved to Tennessee a few years ago and also learned a lot about water drainage. Also the hard way like you! It’s a never ending always changing story. Rain here is brutal.
    Good luck in the future!

  • @mrwinston_thepug
    @mrwinston_thepug Před rokem +1

    That sucks! Thankfully you have support on your channels and people love your family to help get through this.

  • @LunarOutlawsGarage
    @LunarOutlawsGarage Před rokem +5

    Oh no!! My heart sank when I saw the title. You worked very hard for everything you have there!!

  • @Fritzie73
    @Fritzie73 Před rokem +37

    Hi Derek I've been doing drainage for many years and that line behind the garage is Not deep enough! It's almost level with your concrete top and walls which I can see there was no heavy plastic wrap, or a tar coated insulation wrapped around the building or at least across the back because it was well-known a flood area. I would try to save your drive by running a line of tile on the other side of your fence! I'm from Bucyrus Ohio a farm gal so I know about laying tile I had a French drain too!! Good luck I love your videos you 2 are awesome parents!!

    • @jarrsong
      @jarrsong Před rokem

      And should there be some fabric around the perf pipe or top of ditch? Seems like it will fill with sediment quickly with that volume of water.

    • @merlepatterson
      @merlepatterson Před rokem

      @@jarrsong Fabric is the new standard, but a lot of old school systems are still doing just fine as well. As long as perf pipe is surrounded by rock, it should be just fine. I do agree that the pipe looked shallow in back.

  • @f1s2hg3
    @f1s2hg3 Před 2 měsíci

    God Blessed Derek and family and I’m so happy for you guys!!! Your shop is amazing and you deserve all of it because you work hard for your money fixing old cars! AND TRUCKS!!!! Hope the new improvements work and everything stays dry!!!! 😅

  • @mrscoot1
    @mrscoot1 Před 9 dny

    Another thought you may need to put in a french drain on that side of the shop because that is a high bank. There's plenty of videos on Utube showing french drains so I wont, go into the details like I did on the put a pond at the bottom of that big hill in that pasture across the road, and dousing for water description! You are Welcome! LOL!
    IT WAS EXSTREMELY LONG POST! BUT THE POND ACROSS THE ROAD WOULD HELP AND Y'ALL WOULD ENJOY IT! DOUSING ONCE YOU LEARN IT WORKS AND IS FUN AND GOOD TO TEACH THE KIDO'S AND IS SOMETHING THAT NEEDS TO BE PASSED DOWN!

  • @steerclear01
    @steerclear01 Před rokem +22

    Derek, your "trench" up on the hill isn't wide enough to carry the volume of water coming down the mountain. Clay soil won't allow the water to peculate so all of it is looking for the low point to pool. Definitely look at the building grade and make sure the lower ditch is lower than the building or you'll be mopping that floor again. When you are setting the drainage ditch assume you'll have 1" of water covering that whole mountain coming for your building. I'd hate to see a guy and gal have to go through this again.

    • @zeroatomfault
      @zeroatomfault Před rokem +2

      I'd consider digging a moat drain using a lot of 6 - 8" around the rear of the building with a 12" drain pipe taking everything away to a safer run-off to one side and downhill.

    • @jamesb1221222
      @jamesb1221222 Před rokem

      Could probably do a sump pit and pump for those really wet days

  • @chrisfeyen437
    @chrisfeyen437 Před rokem +3

    Sorry to hear the news. I watch another channel called Gate City Foundation Drainage out of North Carolina. One thing he says is to keep the pipe solid that's carrying the water from the gutter to keep that water separate from the surface water captured by the corrugated pipe.

  • @lleekelly5738
    @lleekelly5738 Před rokem +1

    From experience I can tell you it will work. The only addition to this solution is a three foot wall around the shop. leave about a foot open which will also guide the water around the building... My 70 foot long wall was around another 6K. worked like a champ...

  • @davidbunting6088
    @davidbunting6088 Před rokem +1

    I also have been a civil engineer for many years. I agree with Ralph. My suggestions: Pipe across the top should have been much larger or as he says better yet an open ditch to carry more water! Either will require maintenance, cleaning every several years. Get the area growing in a secure ground cover very quickly or dirt washed in will plug up your rock. The dirt hillside you steepened may slide down against your building- get it growing a secure ground cover quickly! I really appreciate your videos and am very glad your again doing your “recover non-running car and drive it 600 miles home” videos. I didn’t realize you were in Minnesota where weather prevented your winter videos. Certainly GOOD LUCK in your Tennessee location!

  • @benhaecker2645
    @benhaecker2645 Před rokem +34

    It's going to do it again.
    They just installed a fancier band-aid this time. That hill, although expensiver, needs to be cut back away from the shop so that you can slope the "pad" (that was never actually built correctly) away from the shop at least 10-15 feet. A diversion terrace or "berm" as others have called it needs to be constructed on top of the hill. While you're up there, make two of them, one on either side of the road that is up there. It isn't complicated at all but excavation cannot be done correctly and cheaply at the same time. Instead of that being a dirt path, have someone that knows what they're doing make you a road up there. That will cause them to cut you a ditch on either side of it. One between the road and fence and one of the other side near the hill. Use the spoils from both road ditches to build a diversion terrace on the top of the hill.
    100% of the water from the neighbor will be sent to Rusty Acres and the house, presumably, or whatever is on the other side of the shop. Erosion and flood control measures will then have to be addressed in those areas until you can get it all sent to the neighbor below you so he can make new plans and a CZcams channel. then, you will deal with only what falls on the rock slope.
    I do this every day. There is no such thing as overkill when it comes to fighting water runoff. Buried pipes have a defined capacity and are easily overwhelmed and clogged in clay soils like yours. Rip Rap should never be installed in that application without a geomat material underneath it. It will silt in the first time it gets saturated like this last storm and become useless.
    Good luck with it, wish I was closer because I could fix it in two days with just the dirt on site. Find the old man in town with the track loader business and turn him loose on it.

    • @damonzilliox2751
      @damonzilliox2751 Před rokem +4

      Yeah. Digging a ditch and then filling it with rock is just plain dumb. SMH.

    • @TheHankerchief26
      @TheHankerchief26 Před rokem +1

      Maybe put a little berm or a concrete diversion dam (wall) between the ditch at the bottom of the hill and the building as well? Something to physically prevent water from running down to the back of the shop?

    • @TroubadourJuggernaut
      @TroubadourJuggernaut Před rokem

      agreed

    • @frankbilotta6302
      @frankbilotta6302 Před rokem +1

      All that needs to be done is a wide swale with a 3 degree slope away from your building. But not into the neighbours either. Easy job. You don’t need rock or gravel. All highways are a perfect example . Just look at the side of them.

    • @TheHankerchief26
      @TheHankerchief26 Před rokem +1

      @@frankbilotta6302 With the shop being at the bottom of a cut in the hill, I don't think a 3° slope is gonna cut it....

  • @wk9673
    @wk9673 Před rokem +31

    I think the "rip rap" will drain good until the spaces between the rocks fill with runoff dirt.

    • @KevinDye101
      @KevinDye101 Před rokem +8

      Yep. A ditch full of rip rap is for slowing water down, not for moving water around.

    • @joerich3714
      @joerich3714 Před rokem

      Derek. You need to put a SOCK over the perforated pipe or else the pipe will fill with sediment and plug up

  • @Harry-oe5os
    @Harry-oe5os Před rokem +1

    Hey Derek and Family, I’m sorry too see the water damage in the new shop.It’ll be a great shop when all is resolved. You’ve come a long way from your two car garage in Minnesota! Good Stuff! Harry 😎👍🇺🇸

  • @parkinson1963
    @parkinson1963 Před rokem +3

    Ideally you should have made French drains, using filter cloth to line and cover the gravel ditches, with a filter sock fitted perforated drainage pipe. This stops it getting clogged with silt and clay from just normal rain. A normal ditch up the slope would be very effective and require minimal maintenance to keep clear.

  • @scottsatterthwaite4073
    @scottsatterthwaite4073 Před rokem +32

    Back and side walls should have been concrete high enough to divert water flow and a french drain installed at the base.

  • @OldManBadly
    @OldManBadly Před rokem +47

    Two recommendations: Get some pallet size shelving, and keep everything up off the floor. Even stuff on the floor that is on a pallet first will keep longer. Also, provided there is nothing against it locally, you may want to get a ocuple of shipping containers to put next to the shop to use for longer term storage. Put them up on blocks or on concrete pads, and they too will be relatively immune to any water issues. It will also free up a ton of space in your shop.

  • @MarkStebbins-xx7ee
    @MarkStebbins-xx7ee Před 3 měsíci +1

    You should have used 6 " corrugated pipe. More water can then flow through it. The main thing is the steepness of the drainage. For faster water removal.

  • @indslpwr04
    @indslpwr04 Před rokem +4

    You need louvered exhaust fans in the ends of the gables. Figure out what direction the wind naturally blows. Have the fan on that side draw air in and the fan on the other side draw air out. It will pull cooler outside air through the building. There will be a massive hot air buildup in the top. Regular fans will just push that hot air up and down.

  • @mikesonneson2824
    @mikesonneson2824 Před rokem +14

    When I was watching the build one of the first things I thought was there is going to be drainage problems with that hillside behind your shop.Especially with the denuded vegetation and moved soils. I won't pontificate on what should be done since you are already addressing the issue and working with local soils and watershed. I watched,felt bad for the flood but still drank a few Keystones and enjoyed the content.

  • @da7heaven
    @da7heaven Před rokem +56

    Sorry this happened to your shop! I'd rather see that T drain connector after your downspout turned into a Y type that would help push the roof water around the corner in the direction you're trying to send the water. The T connector may send water both directions in heavy downpours.

    • @freddy8814
      @freddy8814 Před rokem +7

      Yes the T connector is not good enough. En to many roof on one line.... and 2 system for roof water and the hill.

    • @ripvanrevs
      @ripvanrevs Před rokem +4

      If a guy wants a little cheapo insurance, form up those 6 x 6 posts in the back of the shop and fill um up with concrete about 9 inches high. Might not be totally water proof but will protect against the mud. Makes a good place to set a cold snack to keep it off the floor.

    • @JP-kb4yi
      @JP-kb4yi Před rokem +4

      @@ripvanrevs What you’re referring to is called a rat wall. The back wall should have a 1ft high and 2 sidewalls should be 6inches high. Yes had he built his shop correctly to begin with, the water wouldn’t have gotten in. He like most didn’t want to spend the extra money. He complains about things being expensive, well he’s going to really be upset when he finally figures up how much he spends to correct the problem and the “repairs” in this video WON’T fix the problem.

    • @Boots_on_the_ground
      @Boots_on_the_ground Před rokem +4

      @@JP-kb4yi EXACTLY 💯 what was he thinking building below a mountain without rat walls or giant Retaining Wall 🧱 unfortunately it's all his fault to begin with. Sad.

  • @Andrew865.84
    @Andrew865.84 Před rokem

    Great to have you in the great state of Tennessee. That's where I was born and raised and still live i don't think I'll ever leave.

  • @conductorjohnmthtrains2239

    Ya I watched the shop build just yesterday, I noticed that high ground behind, sorry this happened Derek, dig that ditch down down down! 2-3 ft below shop grade then rock it in, not level but a V shape like ViseGrip❤

  • @robertowens1898
    @robertowens1898 Před rokem +16

    For the fulel set up, gonna need rigid conduit with explosion proof fittings and AHJ approved wiring method. Some require stuffing and fire proof putty/ caulk. Arc/ GFCI combo breaker, if you can get it. We're being told no time soon on them in Kentucky. Love the videos. Thanks for all the hard work. Square D QO

  • @AR-ed3xw
    @AR-ed3xw Před rokem +14

    Looking better, but you probably should've went ahead and paid for "sock" for the perforated pipe

    • @dougyboote
      @dougyboote Před rokem

      I've found the sock to be like trying to filter water through clay bacisly a waste of time

  • @jspice-kl2wc
    @jspice-kl2wc Před rokem

    Sorry your shop got damaged, looking good now. Thank you for sharing. 🙂👍👍👍🙏

  • @ZoeRichardson199
    @ZoeRichardson199 Před rokem +1

    Finished watching video and what a beautiful workshop and such an adorable kitty! Kudos to Jessica for holding it down while you were away...she's the best! Praying everything goes well for you all!😊

  • @WhatIsYourMalfunction
    @WhatIsYourMalfunction Před rokem +7

    I'd go insane with that tragedy, and give you credit for moving forward without a rant or two. Sometimes DIY is costly. Engineers or other professionals cost a penny but you pay them for what they know, not necessarily what they do. Best of luck with the new homestead. As for your wife handling all that while you were away on business -- you have a keeper!

  • @xozindustries7451
    @xozindustries7451 Před rokem +16

    It’s coming along good, I would suggest putting up pallet racking along one wall for storage, it really clears up a Tom of floor space

  • @kentworch
    @kentworch Před rokem +1

    Sorry to hear about the flooding and hopefully your using 12 to 18 inch corrugated lines, especially when running your gutters into it. I'm not really a civil engineer, but that's a lot of water and it's better to hear more capacity than you need than not enough. Glad the shop's coming along though. Hopefully things continue to work out. Shop is definitely looking nice. Looking forward to seeing what it's like when everythings finished and in use. God bless you and your family and may luck be on your side.

  • @jeebs2002
    @jeebs2002 Před rokem

    Thanks for sharing. I love how the new shop it coming together. Hope the updates help with the water and mud.

  • @coryheckler2354
    @coryheckler2354 Před rokem +4

    Sorry about the flooding and loss, Derek! I'm glad you're on the upswing and getting it fixed. God bless bro to you and the family.

  • @bubbadudegaming
    @bubbadudegaming Před rokem +25

    I hate to only be able to gives a thumbs up for when bad things happen

    • @MrMe-lf2ov
      @MrMe-lf2ov Před rokem +3

      I totally understand where you're coming from. However, thumbs up are for the video, not the disaster. More thumbs up plays into the youtube algorithm which allows more views, which in turn equals more channel revenue. Its not malicious people laughing at the misfortunes of others.

    • @SXSPRIME
      @SXSPRIME Před rokem +1

      The thumbs down counter needs to come back.

    • @thebeek123
      @thebeek123 Před rokem +2

      Should be a care button

    • @callanj7282
      @callanj7282 Před rokem

      @@SXSPRIME people just troll with the thumbs down counter.

    • @SXSPRIME
      @SXSPRIME Před rokem

      @@callanj7282 and?

  • @dennismartin5409
    @dennismartin5409 Před rokem

    So sorry for your flooding issue, does look like that is rectified. The shop is AWESOME! I love all your videos! Upper peninsula of Michigan here.

  • @jamesralph8970
    @jamesralph8970 Před rokem +1

    I didn't think that the drainage system was going to work the first time. Water is relentless and your building is at the bottom of a mountain. I hope this new system works out O.K. Good Luck!

  • @artfranz2273
    @artfranz2273 Před rokem +8

    You could have used an angle grinder on that transition ridge on the floor, knock the high spots off. Then a guy that’s good with a trowel could float that area with bridge concrete. You’d likely still see it but it would look 95% better. And you could roll toolboxes etc over it without having to put up ramps

  • @vismundcygnus2800
    @vismundcygnus2800 Před rokem +8

    Can't remember the last time I heard somebody on the internet take responsibility for anything. That's refreshing, and adds to my respect for you. Sorry you got flooded.

  • @YardmanWillie
    @YardmanWillie Před rokem +1

    I'm no engineer but maybe just move the shop to the top of the hill! Better veiw no water run off win win. Shop looks awesome Derek

  • @wayne7399
    @wayne7399 Před rokem

    New shop looks GREAT! Love those windows for natural light and a guy can never have too many outlets! Sorry about the flood…that really sucks.

  • @RichardCWard
    @RichardCWard Před rokem +3

    Thanks for taking the time to share your progress on the new building and all of the drainage issues being redone and hopefully corrected to avoid any future problems. Look forward to seeing the work finished and much success for the future.

  • @troutcreekinspections6819

    I'm sorry this happened. That hill had me concerned when I watched the build. I.R.C. (international residential code) requires all Grading around a structure to slope away from the structure for the first 10'.

  • @kennethbolton951
    @kennethbolton951 Před rokem +2

    Back in the day every time a hurricane trotted in half the developments would become lakes fed by rivers. When my Dad built his place it was high and dry. I asked him why those places got swamped and he said people spend thousands but don't spend $10 dollars on a topographic map. Drainage is always the most important consideration. Whether flat, sloped, high or low water will go where it wants you know. Seeing that back slope in your previous videos for your site my first thought was, bad times a coming. Even now get a site survey, there may be future problems you can plan for. There is some very good advice in the comments below, read them all, good luck. It is ironic that for a guy that is so good at saying, "what can go wrong" on cars didn't apply that to a place that he built to fix them.

  • @terrywillis5784
    @terrywillis5784 Před rokem

    Such an impressive building. You should be very proud of it. I hate that you’re having to deal with the negative stuff. I have probably watched 20 of the videos this week. The 1967 GTO shows were great !!!

  • @darkwood777
    @darkwood777 Před rokem +9

    I lost everything I owned in a rising flood, so I know how it goes. My heart goes out to you all. I'm concerned because what you are showing is just not enough. You would need something far bigger than that 6 in corregated drain pipe and rip-rap. It looks like you have maybe ten acres of land sending rainwater directly toward the shop. Plus that dirt road behind the shop is unstable and has nothing holding it in place. It could slip and wreck the entire back of the building. You need the advice of a landscape architect/engineer to reshape the property coming off that hill. Maybe put in an adequately sized catch basin on the other side of the trees with a spillway that leads the water away from the building. I think clearing out that hedgerow last year maybe also let the water come off the hill more easily.

  • @rogersmith3960
    @rogersmith3960 Před rokem +4

    Being an electrical engineer and wired my own detached garage I see you had the right electricians for the job. Done professionally and as I would expect.

    • @ViceGripLodge
      @ViceGripLodge  Před rokem +2

      Service rite is excellent

    • @colliecollie6822
      @colliecollie6822 Před rokem

      I agree. The conduit bends looked very good and consistent. If the end product, what you can see from the ground, looked that well, I would think the power distribution is more than adequate as well.

    • @rogersmith3960
      @rogersmith3960 Před rokem

      @@colliecollie6822 Yes I'm confident they matched wire size to the right CB's and considered the voltage drop (I*R) based on distance of a wire run.

    • @colliecollie6822
      @colliecollie6822 Před rokem

      @@rogersmith3960 hard to tell if that was 3/4 or 1" emt, but the wire capacity of either should carry the length of that building. Especially if the circuits were loaded properly which I have to believe they are. You don't employ electricians that can make those types of bends and space them that well if your electrical engineer and architect doesn't know what he's doing. That work looks more industrial grade than commercial. I saw no mc cable anywhere. Those were wire pulls from one end to the other. Looked like good work. The tell tell to me would be if the cover screws all lined up vertically! Lol. If you know you know!

  • @brianmatthews9697
    @brianmatthews9697 Před rokem

    Truly sorry to hear about your flood. My mom's house flooded in NY about 15 years ago, a nightmare. Hate to tell you, but you'll be finding brown talcum powder mud for years. Love your shop, really nice. I hope your new drains etc work out well. Water can be a tough thing to control. Like the floor and wouldn't worry about that ridge. It is a shop. Good luck with it. Sure I'll be seeing more of it.

  • @davec.3198
    @davec.3198 Před rokem +1

    I've done a lot of drainage and all I can say is that you absolutely need geotexitle fabric around every drain line you want to absorb water. They get plugged in a season and you're going to be back to the beginning digging all that up. I would also have laid fabric in the top ditch before you put the rip rap in. It's cheap and great insurance.

  • @teejay622
    @teejay622 Před rokem +4

    I think I would have wrapped the riprap with an erosion fiber material to prevent the sand from clogging the riprap. Worst case if the material gets plugged up, you can either remove and replace or clean the material from time to time. I'd also HEAVILY hydro-seed that hill and build a temporary straw bale wall at the base of that hill (uphill of the riprap drain) behind the shop to catch all that loose sandy soil/mud at least until the hydro-seed takes hold and controls the inevitable erosion.
    That 8" rise you pointed out at the drain entrance at the 25:00 mark will fill in on it's own with all that loose soil. If you level it with the pipe, the soil will end up INSIDE the pipe. Leave the "catch basin" at the inlet side and it will fill in on its own. If it's still low after the grass has grown in, then you can fill it but trust me, if you level that off, the soil WILL wash into that pipe.

  • @donlahey1734
    @donlahey1734 Před rokem +3

    My heart goes out to you. You've earned your way to the top. Keep on keeping on! Good people are hard to find. And you are...

  • @brandonzimmerer390
    @brandonzimmerer390 Před rokem

    Man it has to feel awesome to finally have your own shop and build it like you want! Congratulations brother!

  • @boatbutch
    @boatbutch Před rokem

    Feel your pain. Rode out Hurricane Sandy surge with a small fleet of boats on the water. Brought all my tools off the docks to on land figuring it’s so scary out on the water that it’s safer inside, waist high. Water only came up waist high but everything became buoyant and crashed everywhere. My tote full of power tools actually got thru it fine til I brought them back out to the dock and our landlubber neighbors just ran their trash pump hoses over the edge of pier and they filled my power tool tote with water. The aftermath was worse than riding out the storm.

  • @hagerhog118
    @hagerhog118 Před rokem +4

    So sorry for the flood and all the families hard work. I'm very sad for such an awesome shop, to have a bad time. NOT FAIR. Yall will grow and be even more heck yea!!!!! Keep it up vice grip family!!! We all love what you do.

  • @offhandacoustic
    @offhandacoustic Před rokem +4

    Watching this as my shop is filling with water. Its been POURING for the past hour. Luckily, I know what happens to my shop when it rains. Previous owner built my shop on a large hillside like yours and didn't do anything for water management. No drain tile, no culvert or anything at all. Wish I could meet the fella and ask him what the hell he was thinking.

  • @k.g.kennedy9471
    @k.g.kennedy9471 Před rokem

    Awe so sorry to hear this Derrick. I know it's your dream to have this shop. But you will overcome this tragic flood . That's why I watch your videos cause you never give up. That my friend makes you a real man who never gives up. Praying you and your family will have the life you worked to provide them . God speed my friend your friend and nabour to the north Kel Kennedy. 💯🇨🇦❤️😎👍🙏

  • @dcwebb1
    @dcwebb1 Před rokem

    I agree with several of the comments, I think a zoom call is very much needed to address your water problems to help insure flooding does not occur in the future. Good luck, you have one of the best channels on youtube.

  • @JohntheStriper
    @JohntheStriper Před rokem +4

    I've been following this with interest, and I'm sorry that this event has set you back. I've moved lots over the years, and the first thing I do when I get a new shop or garage, is build shelves. I always used the suggestions that an article in Hot Rod magazine shared about 30 - 35 years ago. I'd suggest shelving behind every car lift, to hold the parts you need for those vehicles on those lifts. I used the 2X4 uprights, and 1X4 front and rear slats, and then plywood for the shelves. Anything on wheels or in plastic bins on the floor, heavier stuff in the next 2 shelves, and then light stuff on the next ones. Spacing gets taller as you go up. 16" depth, 8' tall. You'll wish you had done it years ago. You might have to move the lifts back a foot, but I highly recommend it. Talk about Organization!!!
    Could a guy, actually......?
    I love what you're doing, especially including your kids. I look forward to your revival videos, and the crew cab build was epic!
    PS, I have to agree that you need a good retaining wall. What you have there is not enough, and the next rain event could bring more mud. We're calling them rain events now. We had one in November that washed out the 3 highways and 2 rail lines that isolated Vancouver from the rest of the country for a few days. They're still repairing one highway, new bridges, etc.

  • @benm8605
    @benm8605 Před rokem +8

    So sorry this happened to you guys, what a pain. On a positive note, the cold snack porch and awning look great! Looking forward to the rest of the build 👍

  • @barryrussell4106
    @barryrussell4106 Před rokem +2

    You could also dig against your back slab and place a flashing up the wall a few inches and under the ground a foot it would be another barrier. Looking great

  • @bartorlans5390
    @bartorlans5390 Před rokem

    Sorry for your troubles sir.

  • @just_a_guy_doing
    @just_a_guy_doing Před rokem +4

    Oh I feel your pain, when I built my garage, it was a similar situation on a hillside, and when dug the foundation I was 24 inches lower than I should have. First heavy rainstorm we had 2 inches of water in the garage, the garage doors were actually holding the water back. Ended up having 8 inch perf drain installed, with 36 inch wide trenches and 2 large concrete drain basins to catch any thawing snow or influx of major 100 year rain, etc. Needless to say, a huge headache and lesson learned. Very expensive mistake, but extremely happy with end results. Hope your solution corrects the issue, I'm sure it will..

  • @otakumagnet8106
    @otakumagnet8106 Před rokem +19

    I should have mentioned it earlier in the build, but having worked in several shops, suggest you enclose the compressor with an exterior exhaust fan. Foam board insulation will help cut the sound cheaply so it doesn't interfere with your filming too.

  • @johnwinter9722
    @johnwinter9722 Před rokem

    You have a lot of comments by drainage experts here, so no comment from me on that. Hope it all works out. I have seen the power of water running off of fields at our recreational property near Durand, WI. Our cabin was located at the base of the runoff in a coulee. Rivers of chocolate brown water running past the cabin after a big rain. So much water and so much power in that water. On the shop, wow!! Looks great. The electrical, the floor, the doors, and the plan all look fantastic. I was waiting to hear about HVAC, and you discussed it. 105F in Tennessee in the summer will make for a hot barn, as I am sure you know. My MG mechanic in Chippawa Falls, WI has a new shop with wonderful HVAC installed. A smaller version of your shop. I had a starter installed in my 57-year-old MGB earlier this summer and it was very pleasant to sit and "help" him in the cool shop. Looking forward to more shop tours as your projects unfold.

  • @austinrogers9488
    @austinrogers9488 Před rokem +5

    Glad to get a new VGL video but feel bad this happened to you Derek. But minus the flood, the building looks great. Love the idea of having an ol fuel pump that works sitting in front of the shop. Will be a neat addition.

  • @mongo64071
    @mongo64071 Před rokem +4

    Sorry to hear about the water. I’ve been there when sump pump failed. One suggestion is to get lots of plastic totes and see if you can get wood pallets to stack the totes on. Just in case.

  • @justinowens9323
    @justinowens9323 Před rokem

    I hope and pray everything works out good for you with the new drainage system and your shop. Looks like whoever doing it doing it right

  • @tallybeaverman9462
    @tallybeaverman9462 Před 2 měsíci

    As a trapper, I use steel traps that are pretty rusty after the season. So I soak them in vinegar water over night. In the morning I hose off all the rust, then dip them back in vinegar to keep them from rusting again before they dry, so I can paint them. You may be able to do that with parts and hand tools so you can use them. I use 50/50 mix of vinegar & water.

  • @04dmaxss
    @04dmaxss Před rokem +3

    It's amazing where water goes when you get a few inches of rain, good job on the drainage update. The shop looks amazing. Seems like you have everything planned out really good. Waiting to build a 40x80 in Wisconsin

  • @GarthR
    @GarthR Před rokem +7

    I would have added a seperate drain for the gutters that roof is gonna catch some water add that to the hillside water be worth adding a second pipe hope U get it sorted

  • @Jon_B_Quick
    @Jon_B_Quick Před rokem +1

    I hope you have a vapor barrier under your slab, because if you don't, your floor will sweat and where you didn't put them chips in the floor it will be slick as owl hooky !

  • @johnnyhd8835
    @johnnyhd8835 Před rokem +14

    If I may offer advice, do not drain your eavestroughs into a perforated drainage pipe. It may end up filling up your ditch out back opposite to what you want. Use it to drain the stone ditch (French drain). I would run a separate non perforated pipe for your gutters
    Otherwise looking good!

  • @williamhauser7156
    @williamhauser7156 Před rokem +6

    Your downspouts should have there own pipe, maybe even 6". and it should be solid pipe. i wouldn't drive your Winnebago on that perforated pipe, it will crush.