Lawton Oklahoma French Drain Installation, Oklahoma City, Edmond, Norman, Drain Repair, Drain Installation/ –

Posted: January 9, 2012 in french drain, French Drain Installation, French Drain Repair, French Drain Service
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Lawton Oklahoma French Drain Installation.  Oklahoma Drainage and Sprikler Repair has installed French Drains in Lawton since 1993.  We service all of Central and Western Oklahoma.

Oklahoma Drainage 405 203 9419 — We provide:

    French Drain Installation, Surface Drain Installation, Drainage System Installation

French Drain Installed in Lawton

We Install Drainage Systems to fit various needs for homeowners and businesses.

A Drainage System can

utilize French Drains, Surface Drains, Channel Drains or Sump Pumps as the intake part to the Drainage System.  The Drain or Sump Pump brings water into the Drainpipe.  Next, The Drainpipe takes the water to the ” Exit.”  Which is Either a “Curb Outlet” or a “ Pop Up Emitter.”

The Three parts of A Drainage System are:   THE INTAKE (French Drain or Surface Drain) etc.  The TRANSITION Pipe) which can be many sizes or type. The EXIT (A Curb Outlet or Pop-Up Emitter)

Curb Outlet as an Exit Point for a French Drain in Edmond

The Drainage part of our company name means that we solve water problems for people in Oklahoma.

Heavy rain is becoming more common.

Back in 1993 when I first started, a hard rain was considered to be about an Inch per/hour.  It was fairly rare but not too uncommon.

Today things are different.

A weather report of rainfall at or above 4 inches per/hour was not uncommon in 2019.  Excess water causes all types of damage to property both residential and commercial.

Our Drainage Systems drain water away from places you don’t want it to be.  You might have water standing along the foundation of your house, or inside your basement.  You might have water on your driveway or flowerbed too.

Designing a French Drain or a Drainage System

When I talk to a potential customer while doing a Drainage System estimate, I take a lot of things into consideration.

First, I have the Customer show me where water is standing or where it is going that it shouldn’t.  This is part of defining the specific problem area.

Sometimes the Water Problem Area is larger and more involved than the customer realizes.

Once the Water Problem Area is clearly defined, the next step is to determine how the water is getting to the problem area.  Many times, there is more than one Water Source to the Water Problem area.

A big mistake in Drainage System Design is to stop once the most obvious Water Source is found.

A Drainage System Designer

must be a detective to some degree.  For Example:  Water running down the hill and onto the back patio might be the most obvious water source.  Sub-surface water or a neighbor’s new gutter downspout could also be contributing.  Most of the time water gets into the problem area from more than one source.

Next you must decide where to take the water.  This is determining an Exit Point for the Drainage System.  If possible, you want your exit point to be downhill from the problem area.  If it is up hill in all directions from the problem area, then the only solution is a Sump Pump.

Determine Exit Points

Once an exit Point is determined, you must ask yourself if there is any way to install two exit points.

Usually this can only work when an exit point can work on both ends of a Drainage System.

The benefit of two Exit Points in a Drainage System is it greatly increases the water capacity for the Drainage System.  It can move much more water faster during a heavy rain than a system with just one Exit Point.  Most Drainage Systems can only utilize one Exit Point.

Popup Emitter to release water from a French Drain in Yukon

Popup Emitter to release water from a French Drain in Yukon

Next, we have to decide what type of drain to install in the problem area.  If it is a small area with one water source, usually a Surface Drain is best.  If the water problem area is large with one or several water sources, a French Drain is usually installed.

If you have several problem drainage areas,

you must use larger Drainpipe if you want to connect them together to one exit point.  Large French Drains should have their own exit point without attaching other Surface Drains or Gutters to them.  It is very common to connect too many drains or gutters into a Drainage System.  A hard rain can overwhelm the Drainage System’s Water Flow Capacity.  When that happens, water backs up and the problem area floods.

French Drain connected into Drainage System

French Drain connected into Drainage System

I just shake my head

when I see 3 French Drains and 5 gutters connected into one exit drainpipe. I see this type of design all the time.  Why spend money for a Drainage System that won’t work?  Lots of Cheap Builders and Fly-By-Night Drainage Companies cut corners on Drainage Systems and French Drains on new home construction.

For a French Drain or a Surface Drain or any type of Drainage System, if in doubt, use a larger Drainpipe.  Four Inch Drainpipe is the most common. Six-inch Drainpipe is always better.   If you are going to connect a French Drain and Surface Drain together, use 6-inch Drainpipe.

French Drain Installation with colored river rock and Edging

French Drain with colored river rock and Edging

Wow!

A hard rain came through last night.   Hard rains in Oklahoma typically cause flooding. Standing water is never a good thing.  It causes damage to grass, trees, sidewalks, foundations, and driveways. We can help if you have Drainage Problems with your home or small business.  If you live in Central Oklahoma, we can provide a free estimate for a drainage system that will address your specific Drainage Problems.

Get rid of standing water!

Oklahoma Drainage utilize:

French Drains, Surface Drains, Channel Drains, Basin Drains, Basement Drains, Trench Drains, and Sump Pumps. We install a variety of drains to solve a variety of Drainage Problems.  If you live in Central Oklahoma and have trouble with standing water after a thunderstorm, or if your driveway turns into a moat after a hard rain, or worst of all, you have water seeping into your home, give us a call

 

Comments
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