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Author Message
25 new of 318 responses total.
rcurl
response 215 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 16:10 UTC 2006

Re #s 208 & 209: HAH! I saw through you right away!

But that doesn't mean that there are any gods. 
jep
response 216 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 16:21 UTC 2006

Thanks, Rane!
aruba
response 217 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 8 00:45 UTC 2006

LOL at #209.  Thanks jep.
naftee
response 218 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 8 04:17 UTC 2006

thanks aruba !
happyboy
response 219 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 8 17:43 UTC 2006

thanks naftee!
tod
response 220 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 8 17:57 UTC 2006

Thanks STeve!
scholar
response 221 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 8 20:31 UTC 2006

thanks, todd!
tod
response 222 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 8 20:35 UTC 2006

Thanks Marcus!
naftee
response 223 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 9 04:24 UTC 2006

thanks happyboy!
tod
response 224 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 9 16:49 UTC 2006

thanks soup!
naftee
response 225 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 10 01:46 UTC 2006

thanks tod !
tod
response 226 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 10 04:45 UTC 2006

thanks april!
naftee
response 227 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 11 05:27 UTC 2006

may thanks !
jadecat
response 228 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 14:13 UTC 2006

RIP Andreas Katsulas- 2-13-06.

Very bummed. 
naftee
response 229 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 02:29 UTC 2006

 ;(
keesan
response 230 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 22 15:17 UTC 2006

Jim reports that his basement flooded deep enough to leave water in the bike
tires that were on the floor.  He stores insulation and other things on the
floor.  From now on he is going to snake out the drains twice a year before
it floods (which it tends to do every spring).  Apparently it has been warm
enough this winter for the tree roots to grow in February.  He has to make
space to use the snake in.
Since he did not take a bath or shower recently, the water must have come up
from below, he says.  The good news is he is thinking (as usual) about having
less junk stored in the basement and will attack it by getting rid of some
of the broken tape decks upstairs that we could not fix a few times already.
tod
response 231 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 22 17:16 UTC 2006

bdh used to recommend flushing a nice scoop of kosher salt down the torlet
to make the tree roots recede.
keesan
response 232 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 22 20:02 UTC 2006

The hardware store sells stronger chemicals to kill tree roots with.  I would
rather not put them into the river.
rcurl
response 233 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 22 20:10 UTC 2006

We once had a street sewer line backup that put 16 inches of sewage in our 
basement (1993). Otherwise we have had intermittent backups apparently 
from plugs forming in our sewer line, and we have had these reamed out by 
sewer service. Because of how traumatic a sewer backup is, I installed an 
float alarm in a sewer cleanout port which sets off alarms on both the 
first and second floor of our house. The alarm sounds when water backs up 
in the sewer pipe to within about a foot of the basement floor. From this 
I have learned some important information.

When the alarm sounds I open the cleanout port and observe the water 
level. If I keep running water until the level creeps up to close to the 
level of the basement floor, after some minutes in all cases the sewer 
line suddenly drains and remains clear. I interpret this to be a problem 
of toilet paper building up a dam at the sewer line outfall into the 
street sewer, which can be forced clear by maintaining a high level in the 
line for some minutes.

Tree roots may have played a role in previous backups, but I now use a 
chemical root killer once per year in late April. This product is called 
Roebic Foaming Root Killer.

Since our footing drain is into the sanitary sewer we could have backups 
due to rainfall if the line plugs. Our alarm allows us to address the 
problem before the basement floods.

I would not recommend the "classic" treatment, copper sulfate, as its 
effect is very temporary and it also corrodes iron sewer pipes.
rcurl
response 234 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 22 20:14 UTC 2006

In regard to #232, the amount of the root killer used once annually by 
those few people with root problems is many orders of magnitude smaller 
than all the lawn chemical weed killers that find the way into the sewer 
system. If the product I used was a serious pollutant problem its use 
would not be permitted.
bru
response 235 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 22 21:23 UTC 2006

One way to prevent backup flooding that we used on the farm was to build a
coffer dam and put a sump pump with auto float in it.  Of course you gotta
have a place to pump it to.  Water would come up, lift the float, start the
pump, and away she goes!  Don't know how well it would work with sewage
though.
nharmon
response 236 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 22 21:28 UTC 2006

Our sump pump pumps into the sewer!
keesan
response 237 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 22 22:45 UTC 2006

Jim is still cleaning up the basement to make space to work in.  First he
cleaned up another project upstairs, where he was trying to run a tape deck
into a 2-part receiver that had a dead tape deck in the part with the power
supply and the tuner in the other part.  It looks odd now but works, he says,
except that the phono was not working, which is what he was trying to use this
old receiver for in the first place.  The newer one has no phono input.
kingjon
response 238 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 26 02:19 UTC 2006

I am unhappy (well, that's not the right word, but I can't think of a better
one) because my computer is taking days to compile OpenOffice. (I'm compiling
it myself rather than use the binary package because the binary package was so
slow as to be nearly unusable.)

nharmon
response 239 of 318: Mark Unseen   Feb 26 03:05 UTC 2006

Please let me know how it goes Jon. OpenOffice runs really slow for me
too and if I can speed that up by a lot compiling it myself, that would
rock.
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