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DIY Electrical Service trenching and conduit Installation

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  • čas přidán 14. 02. 2019
  • DIY Electrical Service trenching and conduit Installation
    I will be digging the trenches and installing conduit for underground power lines to be installed to a single family house. We are going to have to trench threw a easement in order to install the conduit from the Green power box across the street to the new home location.
    I will be covering the importance of calling 811" call before you dig" and also very briefly showing what can happen, when the markings on the ground aren't marked correctly.
    Underground power started more than 50 years ago to replace overhead distribution systems. Underground service installations by the power industry is complex. However it can be done and has a lot of great benefits. Lack of interest on the part of the power company should not deter you from taking advantage of the benefits of buried distribution systems.
    When the estimated cost of buried services exceeds the estimated cost of aerial services by more than ten per cent, you should negotiate with the power district or developer on the following basis:
    No charge where the developer, builderor, or you dig and backfills trenches for the distribution cable and all service wires.
    where you digs and backfills all trenches, the developer or builder will pay that cost which exceeds the estimated cost of aerial plant by more than ten percent.
    I recommend that underground power systems be used exclusively. There are certain instances where it is not feasible however theses are very rare.

Komentáře • 127

  • @claudiaLaCroix007
    @claudiaLaCroix007 Před 9 dny

    Digging up a pool my pool company came across the main power conduit and now the nightmare begins. California is not easy to work with. Now I have a hole in my backyard and no end in sight. Your video provided a lot of information as to what goes into this stuff. Thank you!

  • @frankielobo8525
    @frankielobo8525 Před 5 lety +2

    Nice job on operating the Kubota. I've operated for 32 years almost every piece of equipment and I give props to you. The man who taught me said "pretend the shovel or forks are your hands" Nice work !!

  • @ZR1Terror
    @ZR1Terror Před rokem +2

    A backhoe is ok. Definitely will save your back. But a mini excavator is on another level. I traded in my Mahindra Emax for a Kubota U-25. The efficiency is on another level.

  • @davidhimmelsbach557
    @davidhimmelsbach557 Před 3 lety +8

    Tip from an EC: when you're crossing a marked line ( 811 notification paint ) FIND that trench, find that pipe. After the top soil is pulled back -- you're looking for the disturbed soil ( if spottable ) where the old trench was. In California, our soils are so tough that old trenches really show up -- after the top has been stripped back. There is a nifty tool used -- it's a stiff nylon coated probe with a T handle on its top. You must keep probing until you find the actual pipe -- and its trench -- because you want to know with certainty that the water pipe// any crossing pipe is truly found. As a general rule, you want to trench SHALLOW until all crossing trenches are revealed. Note that an old trench will usually not have the level of compaction seen in the native soil. It will give way to the T probe. That's how you know you're dialing into an old, semi-compacted trench.
    This method is slower than just hacking ahead, but the cost of hitting a pipe is just too much to bear.
    Lastly, don't assume that the 811 dowser found all of the crossing pipes. His records may be sloppy. So he'll find one pipe, one trench -- but yet there is another just a few feet away. The typical instruments will not reveal such a proximate parallel or semi-parallel trench. Remember, you'r hunting for trenches -- even more than hunting for pipes. That's what the probing is all about. For myself, I'd always dump such projects onto an insured contractor. My days of jumping into a trench are over.

  • @bobferranti5222
    @bobferranti5222 Před 5 lety +11

    Great video, learned a lot of things. Great idea on digging the trench in sections so you didn't inconvenience the neighbors.

  • @OldPumpMan
    @OldPumpMan Před 5 lety +5

    Yeah, It Is Sooooo Important To Call For Proper Utility Marking For Sure. About 15 Yrs Ago We Were Doing Construction In A Town With A Big Air Force Base & Called "Okie" & They Mismarked The Main Fiber Optic Line Going To The Base By Close To 50 Feet & We Snagged And Broke It With Our Backhoe; Seeing That Cable On The Bucket Teeth Made Me About Throw-Up. It Wasnt Our Fault Since It Was Mismarked, But It Was Still Sickening😖!!

  • @hardinhp
    @hardinhp Před 3 lety +8

    two things i'd do different is to put warning tape over the tubes and clean the ditch up a bit and not letting small and large stones touch the tubes so it doesn't damage them long term.

  • @csul5961
    @csul5961 Před 4 lety +5

    I did not hear you mention it but I would use schedule 40 conduit on driveway and glue it together. also you need to keep power wires about 12 inches from cable/phone wires so there is no interference with signal.

  • @alfonsoaguilar9612
    @alfonsoaguilar9612 Před rokem

    Great video and information shared. Greatly appreciate the time you took to Film, explain and edit. I’m about ready to start my ADU project in California and just waiting for plans to be approved.

  • @DSiggy1
    @DSiggy1 Před 4 lety +27

    The National Electrical Code (NEC 300.5(D)(3), requires that underground Service conductors that are buried more than 18", shall have their location identified by a warning tape placed in the trench at least 12" above the installation, unless they are encased by concrete. Did not see that happen here.

    • @outsidefromtheshoretothemo3337
      @outsidefromtheshoretothemo3337 Před 3 lety

      That s probably why he hit the water line because no warning tape.

    • @Nick-vf3wf
      @Nick-vf3wf Před 3 lety +7

      Dude the guy didn’t even use pvc glue

    • @Californians_go_home
      @Californians_go_home Před 9 měsíci

      Where he is, no warning tape is required for underground running through conduit. Direct bury, ribbon is required.

  • @OutdoorswithErik
    @OutdoorswithErik Před 5 lety +4

    Love the backhoe, I wish I would have picked up the backhoe with our Kubota, but, was concerned I wouldn't use it enough. Seeing this video makes me want one! Would have been good for side jobs too, but, it's hard enough for me to get videos out LOL

  • @TheDogLife5225
    @TheDogLife5225 Před 3 lety +5

    Reminds me of way back in the 90s, I bought a property in Michigan with no well or septic. My dad helped me as well... showed me how to find water using a pair of 90 degree bent clothes hanger wires holding loosely in each hand and ad we walked over water, the tips would begin to point together.

    • @hootowl6354
      @hootowl6354 Před 3 lety +2

      There is no scientific reason for those rods to cross.

    • @Thekrpntr
      @Thekrpntr Před 2 lety +2

      @@hootowl6354 And yet, they do.

    • @hootowl6354
      @hootowl6354 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Thekrpntr Right, with a simple twist of the fingers. If they never crossed the twister would be out of a job.

    • @Thekrpntr
      @Thekrpntr Před 2 lety +3

      @@hootowl6354 science is not about knowing, it's about figuring stuff out. It works, but there is no known reason. You may think it's a scam, yet it's a well known and used method of finding water. Great for finding water lines and drainage pipes. I wish it paid extra, I would be rich.

    • @mikemount4411
      @mikemount4411 Před rokem +1

      I have used the two rods for years and they have never let me down.

  • @davecalvo6418
    @davecalvo6418 Před dnem

    Couple of things I would suggest here, for one never just dump conduit in a trench without having "bell ends" in place to keep out the dirt or at least tape the ends. Second you really should have used marking tape a foot down from finished grade so that anyone digging there in the future can see that there's an electrical conduit buried there. I would also scrape the top a few inches at a time where you know there's water lines or any other lines to prevent what you did here.

  • @scottmeister8980
    @scottmeister8980 Před 5 lety +9

    Know your feeling when you hit the water line. We had called 811 to have everything marked and hit a 2" gas line over 20 feet away which would off been to the north of the marking. No reason given when question for being so far off.

    • @M33t3y
      @M33t3y Před 5 lety +4

      Those locators do whatever the hell they want

    • @deankay4434
      @deankay4434 Před 3 lety +1

      Come on and give the locator guy some credit or a break. After all, last week, the locator tech did not get the assistant managers job at Burger King, because he failed the math test!

    • @brentnorrod300
      @brentnorrod300 Před 3 lety +1

      Same here, I took out a gas line that was miss marked by 15ft.

  • @jjustj
    @jjustj Před 4 lety +1

    enjoyed the vid, if it were my ditch, i would have shaded the conduit then compressed the shading material(dirt) by foot compaction, failure to do this can create a pathway for groundwater to chase the conduit and undermine it. Also tho time comsuming.. back fill in lifts. 1/2 compact, lay scare tape or caution tape then backfill compact. good to go.

  • @sod143
    @sod143 Před 5 lety

    Hey I’m Keyon Tarver from ny I live in va now I been working for Riggs underground u guys work great god bless from a fellow underground company 🚧👷🏿‍♂️🚧

  • @kylekayser2291
    @kylekayser2291 Před 2 lety +1

    I feel for you brother been digging mainline for 20 years if any operator say they never ripped anything out they aren't a hoe hand. FYI learn to use witching rods and learn from every dig. I dig down the city streets up to 40 feet deep around Gas, comm, sewers, water, and God know what else. Even doing little residential digs like you can be a challenge for the seasoned vets.Just always learn from your digs. Witching rods and a good metal detector will be worth the time.

    • @mikemount4411
      @mikemount4411 Před rokem

      Could not agree more!! The rods have saved my butt many times. Lol

  • @deankay4434
    @deankay4434 Před 3 lety +1

    I agree on what should be a "Caution" tape placed above it a few inches. I don't know how long it has been a rule, or how it passed inspection without it. I refuse to blame the installer but I prefer "Best Practices" for safety. Other underground services require a "Bright" color wire, to be tapped at both ends and cross the piping every 15-20 feet to loop it around like a slip knot, to keep it tight to the piping an useful for future locating. I believe on rock ledges that force electrical conduit near the soils top, concrete capping is also best practice or law. Alway talk way in advance, to the inspector to plan for extra time & cost.
    This is underground, but farmers have equipment that will not clear some overhead power lines in rural areas when transporting into fields. As a young guy in the late 60's-70's, I know some farmers who nailed metal signs at the gate "Look Up for Power Lines". But honestly know more worker injured or killed as they fell asleep. At 20 MPH for a tractor but run off the road and in the field, get to close to trees, hook one and flip into a creek. I know of one guy we buried on the farm I was plowing on for $1.00 per hour. But gas was only $0.30 cents a gallon. Up from $0.19 months earlier and people thought the world was ending.

  • @charlesivie5702
    @charlesivie5702 Před 4 lety +1

    Great information video for the novus.

  • @tylerpatterson1267
    @tylerpatterson1267 Před 4 lety +11

    How did you end up on the tractor and your dad running the shovel though? I’d never manage that. Even if it was my tractor. Lol.

  • @domenicdalleva1045
    @domenicdalleva1045 Před 5 lety +17

    No tape was put in over lines for warnings for any one who excavetes next time

    • @joesmitty34
      @joesmitty34 Před 5 lety

      *diy..lol

    • @Exclusive_Criminal
      @Exclusive_Criminal Před 5 lety +3

      There’s a lot of utilities in the ground with no warning tape. There’s high pressure gas manes with no warning tape. I dig around utilities all day long. Dig careful.

    • @IrvingRamirezchannel
      @IrvingRamirezchannel Před 4 lety

      YEAH MAN NO ELECTRIC TERRA TAPE

    • @max3116
      @max3116 Před 4 lety

      Thinking same thing.

  • @ltsnipe292
    @ltsnipe292 Před 4 lety +6

    Why was the water line so high up. Aren’t they supposed to be minimum 4’ down to avoid frost?

    • @teamramo
      @teamramo Před 2 lety +1

      Depends where this is being done.

  • @ethanmitchell2699
    @ethanmitchell2699 Před rokem

    buddies nice as hell on that thing

  • @michaelyounger3240
    @michaelyounger3240 Před 4 lety +5

    What county was this project in. I live in Thurston country and about to conduct my own dig for power lines

  • @asusreviews
    @asusreviews Před rokem +1

    I can't believe they used an expandable coupler to fix this. Just asking for problems when the O-rings fail. I think the best way to repair this is to use unions where you dremel out the stop and overslide it onto one pipe then slide it back. Difficult to do with larger pipes above 1 inch, but with the right tools and technique, its do-able. Probably be much easier with slow setting glue.

  • @seizethecarp_
    @seizethecarp_ Před 5 lety +4

    Guessing by the blue marking that its potable water you hit(?). VERY surprised they used an expandable coupler. Those things are trash. I work in a very similar field and we are not allowed to use them AT ALL. Romac compression coupling only for everything bigger than 1 1/2".

    • @OssyMunoz1
      @OssyMunoz1 Před 5 lety

      I Agree, Those Slip On Romac Repair couplings(Flanged) are what many water districts recommend for repairs like this. Unfortunately for these guys, they will be having to repair this line again in the future after it ruptures:( Don’t do it .

  • @Exclusive_Criminal
    @Exclusive_Criminal Před 5 lety +2

    That’s a nice looking trench friend.

  • @Sparkeee1978
    @Sparkeee1978 Před 5 lety +2

    The kubota hoes are most excellent. nice and tight. alot tighter then many other tractor mounted models.

  • @brucejordan9073
    @brucejordan9073 Před 4 lety +4

    Was this guy trying to run electrical service for a factory . It appeared he was laying at least 2" conduit which can hold 6]. 2/0 AWG conductors ,, enough for 2/ 200 amp circuits This video was supposed to also include conduit installation . I didn't see anything pertaining to conduit until the very end where he held a conduit end cap in his hand
    Also what electrical code did he refer too before he started digging his slit trench . National electrical code requires underground non metal conduit be buried 18"

  • @tonysmobilewash2938
    @tonysmobilewash2938 Před 4 lety

    Digging the power next to the trench lol 9:59 that was funny but good work

  • @triXsolarflare
    @triXsolarflare Před 10 měsíci

    I am laying my main 3" conduit now, and to save future well trenching I am running my water pipe back out the trench to where the well is going in. When I called my electrical company, they said there has to be 12" separation between electrical and water lines, how did you get that separation from the line you broke? Or is that only in my state? They told me I must also put my power line running out to the pump 12" away from the main also

    • @DanielWoodell
      @DanielWoodell  Před 10 měsíci

      Separation requirements are in every state in every county. They apply to things running in the same trench. Some times I trenched extra deep pit the pipe in the ground, backfilled some dirt, and then do the electrical work on top of that. Or whatever has to be inspected first. the person inspecting your electrical is different than the inspector for your waterline.

  • @shanewatkins5636
    @shanewatkins5636 Před 8 měsíci

    Whats the savings doing it yourself?

  • @adrianbarnes3808
    @adrianbarnes3808 Před 3 lety +1

    Why not glue the pipes together? Seal em?

  • @AGhostInTheMachine
    @AGhostInTheMachine Před 3 lety +1

    Question: who paid for the water line repair and any other related damages like water outage, contamination, etc?

  • @mattkrywyj5184
    @mattkrywyj5184 Před 4 lety +1

    How did you dry out that trench so fast?

  • @johnfranks
    @johnfranks Před 5 lety +4

    Caution tape not required?

    • @45NUTS_PART_DEUX
      @45NUTS_PART_DEUX Před 5 lety +1

      Caution Tape , definitely when crossing over other utilities .

  • @noumanraza5307
    @noumanraza5307 Před 5 lety +11

    Main information is never trust on water company 💦

  • @michaelponto4954
    @michaelponto4954 Před 4 lety

    As the water company missmarked the like it is on them to foot the bill for the repairs. Here in NM you have 18" on each side of the line they mark to watch for.

    • @DanielWoodell
      @DanielWoodell  Před 4 lety

      Yup they never billed us for the repair. Granted I did most of the hard work to fix the pipe.

    • @davidgoossen113
      @davidgoossen113 Před 4 lety

      @@DanielWoodell You should have billed them for Labor charges.

  • @adrian27742
    @adrian27742 Před 5 lety +3

    i work digging trenching for electrical power distribution without machine.

  • @drewgoodman7932
    @drewgoodman7932 Před rokem

    This is not the first video ive seen where 811 has made a mistake. Ive seen other videos stating to not even call 811 because of how unreliable they are. Is this common for them?

    • @DanielWoodell
      @DanielWoodell  Před rokem

      I use 811 routinely, at least twice a month. This is the first time that the marks have been off this amount. also, if you don’t call, you don’t have a legal coverage necessary to have somebody else pay for the repairs. At least here in Western Washington if you call 811 they have to mark the ground within 48 hours and those marks can keep you out of court and keep you from having to pay expensive repair cost and fines.

  • @dave_in_florida
    @dave_in_florida Před rokem

    do you need an easement for that trench from your neighbors?

    • @DanielWoodell
      @DanielWoodell  Před rokem

      No when the power company puts in the green boxes they come with easement rights for 15 all around them.

  • @tylercarter770
    @tylercarter770 Před 2 lety

    Glad you’re wearing your hard hat.

  • @concerned_2023
    @concerned_2023 Před 4 lety +1

    Because a waterline does not contain a wire, it's difficult to hit it with a detection device. Never count on a direction of a waterline.
    If you really need to figure out a waterline, open both ends and run a wire.

  • @GardenDocSC
    @GardenDocSC Před 5 lety +2

    Nice video. Dumb question, how do you run the wire through such a long conduit?

    • @griffinhall8
      @griffinhall8 Před 4 lety

      GardenDocSC with a conduit fishing tape

    • @John-hp2hg
      @John-hp2hg Před 4 lety +1

      I'm curious about this too. Would love to see the process

    • @davidgoossen113
      @davidgoossen113 Před 4 lety +7

      @@John-hp2hg
      First, suck a 'mouse' [look it up] thru the pipe pulling a string behind it.
      Use a good vacuum cleaner at the far end, close up the end of the pipe to create the vacuum effect. I've also used a leaf blower at the opposite end of the pipe. [where the mouse starts] Between 'sucking' and 'blowing', the mouse flys thru the pipe like grease lightning.
      2. Attach the string to a light-weight strong rope on one end
      3. Pull the rope thru the pipe
      4. Firmly attach the rope to ALL the wire(s), & cables being pulled thru.
      5. Pull the wire grouping [as one unit] into the pipe and all the way thru.
      NOTES:
      When pulling the wire either stretch the wire out neatly over the ground or better yet set the wires up to feed neatly/evenly off of reels as it is pulled into the pipe.
      Have one guy feeding the wires into the pipe during the pull. He can 'lube' the wires if it is a long pull.
      Have 2 or 3 or more {if needed} guys pulling the wire out the other end. [the grunt work]
      If a lot of wires or you have large wire/reels, have one guy tending to the reels as they roll off the wire.
      The idea, it's not a Race, and everybody works together.
      Also, if at some later date I know I will be pulling more wires thru the same pipe, I will attach a spare string or small rope to the wire pull, and pull that thru. That sets me up for the next wire pull. Use lube for long pulls and if have turns and bends.

  • @get-the-lead-out.4593
    @get-the-lead-out.4593 Před 5 lety +1

    So do all states and power companies give homeowners the right to dig their own ditch from the meter on the house to near the base of the telephone pole where the service run will come from, lay their own conduit and wire according to code, and then just have the power company come out to hook up power at the meter and finish making the connection from the base of the telephone pole up to the power lines on it?
    I'm located in eastern Ohio out in the country (so no in-city type codes to follow) and this will be a 100amp underground service run that's approx 100 feet from the telephone pole (which is located 6 feet off of the road in my yard) to the electric meter on my house.

    • @DanielWoodell
      @DanielWoodell  Před 5 lety

      That is not a strait forward answer, i recommend hat you look up your local power district web page and i suspect you will fine a install hand book. That will cover the information you are asking about, i say this because i have installed power in three different counties in Washington state and all three counties (different power company’s) have deferent rules.

    • @get-the-lead-out.4593
      @get-the-lead-out.4593 Před 5 lety

      @@DanielWoodell
      Grrrrrr I was hoping you weren't going to say that about you having at least 3 different power company's rules to follow in the same state....but hey thanks for the heads up :o) and I'll start looking up the install handbook you mentioned. For now, I just got off of the phone with our American Electric Power (AEP) company who informed me I would have to place a service order with them whereby providing details of the job I'm doing and then one of their technicians will reply within 7 days to exchange more details.

    • @mlke4258
      @mlke4258 Před 5 lety

      My Pole got knocked down a few weeks ago. I decided to run everything underground as well. Had a guy I work with come out with his little backhoe, and dig me a 170’ trench around my raised septic mound to the base of the utility pole.
      I already had a service request in with National Grid to do this work. I dug down about 30-34”, backfilled with 6-8” of sand. Laid the pipe, set the meter pedestal, had the trench inspected before pulling the conductors through the conduit. I just today, backfilled with another 12-18” of sand. Will be pulling the conductors through this weekend, and final backfill. Utility will not reconnect unless all the trenching work is completed.

  • @kengo143
    @kengo143 Před 3 lety

    O wao where is the inspection

  • @DarkSevariant
    @DarkSevariant Před 4 lety +1

    2:00 If you're ever murdered...there's a 90% chance, it was either your Neighbor, or a Family member

  • @michaelgenson5587
    @michaelgenson5587 Před 3 lety

    Have you ever tried witching water lines yourself

  • @xitianllc
    @xitianllc Před 5 lety +1

    Great videos! Can you put power, water and comm. in the same trench? I’m wandering if I should use 1 conduit for power and another for PEX and comm

    • @DanielWoodell
      @DanielWoodell  Před 5 lety +4

      Yes you can put everything in one trench, but there are separation requirements, i recoments looking for your local power companies install hand book on there web page, every place I have built has a hand book for installation requirements on line.

  • @levitra04
    @levitra04 Před 2 lety

    The 1-800 dig people that came to my place didn’t mark a single line right. Not the water, the internet or the electrical main. I even walked them over to where the internet cable was sticking out of the ground and they couldn’t get it right. Beware!!

  • @bluecollarwanderer21
    @bluecollarwanderer21 Před 11 měsíci

    🤟🇺🇸

  • @dmitchellhomes
    @dmitchellhomes Před 5 lety +2

    Expandable coupler... haha! BTW, your trench looks awfully narrow to maintain 1' between line voltage and communications conduits that is required by most utility districts.

    • @M33t3y
      @M33t3y Před 5 lety +5

      That's like three of his feet wide

    • @get-the-lead-out.4593
      @get-the-lead-out.4593 Před 5 lety +1

      David Black,
      from what can be directly seen in the video at 8:15 he easily had enough space for at least 4" between conduits. just looking at the width of the bucket he's using on the backhoe says alot as well ;o)

    • @dmitchellhomes
      @dmitchellhomes Před 5 lety

      @@get-the-lead-out.4593 4" between conduits does not meet code. Utility companies require 1' between private secondary feeders, and communications conduit. Puget Sound Energy says 18" is the minimum trench width with power and a single COMM conduit.

    • @get-the-lead-out.4593
      @get-the-lead-out.4593 Před 5 lety

      @@dmitchellhomes That was my fault...I thought you said 1" and not 1' , and since AEP of Ohio laid my nephew's lines that weren't any more than 4" apart I just thought they were following what the code says

  • @drchamp1902
    @drchamp1902 Před 3 lety

    So much for 811

  • @bluefalcon3ID
    @bluefalcon3ID Před 2 lety

    They get 2 ft either side. Hand diggin time

  • @donmcmannamy3409
    @donmcmannamy3409 Před 4 lety

    So who is held liable for the miss marked water line you or who did the marking?

    • @DanielWoodell
      @DanielWoodell  Před 4 lety +1

      811# marked all of the lines, the water district fixed the broken line on a Sunday, and I gave him all my information, but I never hurt about it, no bill, no phone call. So I don’t know.

    • @donmcmannamy3409
      @donmcmannamy3409 Před 4 lety

      @@DanielWoodell hope they don't comeback on you later

    • @concerned_2023
      @concerned_2023 Před 4 lety

      I've been a trustee on the board of a water district. It's the wild west when it comes to waterlines.

  • @eazolan
    @eazolan Před 4 lety

    Why did you lay two pipes?

    • @jaycahow4667
      @jaycahow4667 Před 2 lety

      Power in one, Communication (Coax/Phone/Ethernet) in other.

  • @alowlytarnished5579
    @alowlytarnished5579 Před 5 lety

    Should have probed for it first but good job overall

  • @charlestonsasha
    @charlestonsasha Před 4 lety

    Now they know where pipe line is)

  • @excalibur2640
    @excalibur2640 Před 2 lety

    Hand digging about 45% don’t lie

  • @jwodehouse7087
    @jwodehouse7087 Před 4 lety

    how deep?

  • @johnredcorn1801
    @johnredcorn1801 Před 4 lety

    What would something like this cost??

    • @bigspook999
      @bigspook999 Před 3 lety

      I would guess 8-13k including wire and materials

  • @danconlan8735
    @danconlan8735 Před 5 lety +1

    Is that a recent dig? Didn't you guys get buried with snow recently? Nice video anyway except for 811 boning you on their markings!

    • @DanielWoodell
      @DanielWoodell  Před 5 lety +2

      Dan Conlan Yeah we did this about a week and a half before the snow came we’re all snowed in now.

  • @brownwarrior6867
    @brownwarrior6867 Před 5 lety

    Is it normal practice for you to Operate without a banksman when cutting across Service Trenches?

    • @DanielWoodell
      @DanielWoodell  Před 5 lety +3

      I dont know what a banksman is, so yes. Oh and by the way im not a contractor im a home owner.

    • @brownwarrior6867
      @brownwarrior6867 Před 5 lety +1

      Daniel Woodell A Banksman would be a spotter ie someone (who knows what they are looking for) who basically is watching where you are digging for underground services or unknown obstacles.
      It is not advisable to be digging where there are known services and to be taking such deep scrapes.
      Shallow scrapes with the bucket looking for any changes in the ground(shingle,tape,sand etc) which might signify a pipe,drain or cable.
      Also when laying your own you should consider putting tape in above your pipework for the next operator who comes in to dig in there.

    • @DanielWoodell
      @DanielWoodell  Před 5 lety +2

      @@brownwarrior6867 So I’m not sure you watch the hole video very closely because in the areas that there where marked out utilities we hand dug, and we also installed caution tape over the top of the wirer per the L&I requirements.

    • @brownwarrior6867
      @brownwarrior6867 Před 5 lety +2

      Daniel Woodell Take some advice from someone who has almost 30 years Plant Operative experience both Military and Civil you need someone to keep an eye on where you are digging from the opposite side of the bucket and you also need to take shallower longer scoops ESPECIALLY when you know there are other Services in the immediate area.
      You sound surprised to hit the water line?
      Any Experienced Operators watching this were sat waiting for it my friend.
      It’s not a criticism all I am doing is trying to help you avoid a similar situation in future.
      I appreciate the fact you are not in Construction but the fact is you are taking the same risks as someone who is.
      In fact more because you aren’t putting in place the Safety measures that these guys adhere to and more importantly live by.
      All the best in the future 👍🏼

    • @tylerpatterson1267
      @tylerpatterson1267 Před 4 lety

      Donnchadh McPáidín I see you point, but also, who is going to assume a water line is 50 feet away from where it’s marked? I mean they have maps and devices to find out exactly where that water line is. I don’t think the fault is in anyway the home owner. And yes, underground utilities/earthwork is my profession. We’d spend 10x longer doing a job if we treated the utility markings basically useless and be out of business.

  • @electricalron
    @electricalron Před 4 lety

    cha Ching

  • @joetterolison4093
    @joetterolison4093 Před 3 lety

    Check

  • @icurip
    @icurip Před 5 lety +1

    Learn how to use a water witch.

  • @jspafford
    @jspafford Před 4 lety

    Why not put some metallic do not dig tape on top of that conduit so people can find it in the future.

    • @danielebrparish4271
      @danielebrparish4271 Před 3 lety

      Probably because the wires are made of metal and have enough current to by located by an electrical detector from above the ground.

  • @DadJuniorVideos
    @DadJuniorVideos Před 3 lety

    Why are you wearing a hard hat lol

  • @paulmcdonough9319
    @paulmcdonough9319 Před rokem

    why do you have a hard hat on

    • @DanielWoodell
      @DanielWoodell  Před rokem

      Because people on CZcams, complain about safety crap all the time. And my mother-in-law bought it for me, and I was doing this work at her house.

  • @anilopemadirus6103
    @anilopemadirus6103 Před 5 lety

    great video. I would like to share an embarrassing moment with you guys. I farted in a big way while engaging in a sixty niner with my Niebuhr. It was not good

  • @jakewalter3729
    @jakewalter3729 Před 5 lety

    Zzz

  • @MrSquawkvfr
    @MrSquawkvfr Před 4 lety

    Shame on you...sitting on the tractor while your dad operates the manual labor device.

    • @aaronsharp8857
      @aaronsharp8857 Před 4 lety

      because his dads not a pussy like yours, this guy is a true working man with his hands not letting age slow him down