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Septic System
My nephew is buying an older house. He is having the house inspected.
He would like to have septic system checked out. Are there any suggestions from the forum on this. Do the persons who pump out septic systems a person to contact. Thanks Dave M |
My brother had his septic very expensively fail a year after he bought his house so what you are thinking is exceptionally smart.
Unfortunately I'm not sure what they can find out without digging it all up. My understanding is that its very hard to see just how filled up the septic is. Anyway I highly recommend Lamprey Septic. They are awesome. |
Our septic inspection did two major things: it told us the condition of the leaching field and septic tank/components. Essentially, we were told that with regular maintenance (pumping every couple years) and being careful with what we put into it (no oils, greases, paints, bleaches, etc.) that we still had lots of life in it. The system was installed in 1967.
Good luck! Sent from my XT1528 using Tapatalk |
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Get a copy and take to a septic designer. Find out who constructed/installed septic system and speak with them. There have been various designs of septic systems. From a 55 gallon drum to a 1200 gallon concrete double/triple chamber. Any part of the system can fail. I view too many newer systems where the homeowner lets trees grow on top of the leach field. Trees near the tank. Trees near the lines going from house to tank and such. If this is a pump system find out when pump was changed. A lot of variables involved. |
I second Lamprey's......they can track the history of the system and tell you exactly what condition it's in. Best of all they are completely trustworthy.
We use them commercially and for our home as well. They'll never let you down day, night or weekend in an emergency. |
who
thinkxingu, who did your inspection.
Thanks Dave M |
www.alslaconiasepticnh.com was super-duper, and would use them again.....in other words....thought the price was fair ....believe it was $200 to pump out a 1000-gal tank.
Just in case you were wondering where does this yucky messy septic pump-out go from here ..... believe it goes to the Meredith Water & Sewer Dept, where the septic truck unloads it into the town sewer system, but could be I am incorrect, and it gets trucked someplace else? Where does it all go? |
JB & Sons tested for us when we bought our house.
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Sent from my XT1528 using Tapatalk |
When the tank is inspected, it needs to be drained first. The inside is what gets inspected.
If you ever feel a need to have the outside of a tank inspected, after you own the house, you might as well have a new one ready to install at the same time. The digging is going to cost a lot and if the tank is bad you can't leave it exposed until a new one is delivered. Good luck! |
We used Lamprey as well. We got lucky in that the previous owner must have gotten it pumped out prior to us buying it. When they did the inspection and pulled the lid off of the tank he put his probe in and there was virtually no solids. Was also helpful in that we marked off everything so that future pump outs/inspections would be easier.
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Another technique is to bury a brick over the access, flush with the ground level. Sometimes though, these get moved by people (kids) who don't know what the brick is for. |
I use Lampreys at my home which he has taken care of for the past 25 years.
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I live here... I am always Upthesaukee. |
I had Lamprey inspect the system for a house I bough 5 years ago and they said all was fine.
Unbeknownst to them, I had to have it replaced as roots were growing in, pipes were crushed and lines were blocked. I have done my research so please realize without getting a camera down in there, digging stuff up and getting in there, the inspection won't be able to tell the entire story 100% |
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