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HappyCamper wrote: Our driveway was washed out when we got home so I know at some point today we got a lot of rain.
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otisptoadwater wrote:
HappyCamper wrote: Our driveway was washed out when we got home so I know at some point today we got a lot of rain.
[sarcasm]Oh sure, get on this thread and brag about having a nice clean driveway while the rest of us are melting from the heat!
Curious minds want to know, what brand of detergent do you use on your driveway and how do you know how much to use and when/where to apply it?[/sarcasm]
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HappyCamper wrote: Funny now I know what chore I will have this weekend...lucky me will get to bring all the road base back up to fill in the big ruts anyone want to help there is free beer in it for you.
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otisptoadwater wrote:
HappyCamper wrote: Funny now I know what chore I will have this weekend...lucky me will get to bring all the road base back up to fill in the big ruts anyone want to help there is free beer in it for you.
Free beer you say?! Sounds to me like you need a couple of rocky mountain redneck injunears to install you some sort of drainage/culvert system to keep the water from messing up your driveway in the future. If the water has a place to go most of the work is in trenching out the place in between the stuff you don't want washed away. Installing some schedule 40 PCV or ABS or even galvanized steel pipes to safely convey the water from where it comes near the driveway, under the driveway, and out to a place that you don't care so much about erosion or better still you want to irrigate or top off a small pond (it was there the whole time, honest...).
You'll need to understand some complex principals like the fact that water runs downhill and how to keep debris out of the intake of your drainage system. Grates work best but you have to clear them on a regular basis and don't forget that they will only keep out the stuff bigger than the openings in the grate. The pitch of the drain pipe needs to be fairly aggressive to avoid silt build up so your drain pipe will be fairly shallow at the high end of the drain system but you'll need to dig deeper and deeper the further the pipe goes to have a chance of keeping it clear of silt or at least not clogged (think in terms of an half inch per foot of 12 inch pipe for a run around 20 feet long; bigger pipe but same drop should work for slightly longer runs). Also know that the longer the run of continuous pipe the larger you'll want the pipes diameter to be. The scale of the job should help you decide if you want to DIY or hire up someone who has access to a backhoe. If it was me and I needed to install more than 20 feet of pipe in a straight run I'd hire someone to dig the trench with a backhoe and then drop in the pipe and back fill the trench myself by hand.
Or you could spend a couple of afternoons scooping stuff from the bottom of the driveway and returning it back to the top where it will eventually make its way back to the lowest part of your driveway...
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