Submitted by basic_hydronium t3_1223xn6 in DIY
In my basement I have a settling issue where the slab has sunk about 2-3 inches. My main sewer line goes through this same area and has a 2-3 inch belly in the middle of it. I’ve had the sewer line inspected and was recommended to manage through the belly with regular cleanings with a bladder as a trenched repair would be very expensive and disruptive. The foundation specialists found no problems with the structural foundation and the issue was a localized sag. They recommended polyjacking the slab (injecting a polymer foam in to lift and level the slab, while filling the void space created) to fix the sag. The location of the sag and the belly are near identical and the same relative depth, probably a common root cause.
My idea is to drill holes in the concrete and fish a high strength hose clamp (like this: http://surl.li/fuhbo )through to attach the sewer line to the slab. This way when the slab is lifted the ~2inches the sewer line is also lifted and the belly is gone. The poly foam would then expand under the sewer line and support both the sewer line and the slab. This seems like a good opportunity to minimize the disruption of a trenched repair and solve both problems. Is there anything I’m overlooking? Would this work?
Here’s a drawing of the layout and the idea to try and make it clearer: https://imgur.com/a/pYl9iGK
allangee t1_jdrx9wo wrote
Do you know what caused the settling in the first place, and have you remedied it? Otherwise, you'll be repeating the process.
How do plan to fish down through one hole, past any gravel/fill, under the pipe, and then back up through gravel/fill to a relatively tiny hole?
Is the pipe plastic? If it's cast iron, any strange stress could crack it. Or perhaps the pipe is already leaking somewhere causing the settling in the first place?
If your basement is unfinished and you have clear access to the concrete, you can do most of the work on your own. (I've replaced entire sections of sewer pipe.) Get a saw and a couple of diamond blades -- a thrift store circular saw is ideal. Cut a line either side of the trench you need and break out the concrete. Raise the pipe and pack fill under it. Add a little rebar to the edges of the trench and fill it while also bringing up the floor to the correct level.
But again -- if you haven't figured out why it happened in the first place, it's likely to happen again.