paulsharvey
Super Member
I would give the air and elbow grease approach a try. If you use water, you run a very real risk of getting carried away, and then you'll have a dip and cracks at the pipe crossing.It's more of a loamy soil. Mostly sand.
I would give the air and elbow grease approach a try. If you use water, you run a very real risk of getting carried away, and then you'll have a dip and cracks at the pipe crossing.It's more of a loamy soil. Mostly sand.
Have a chat with your local rental tool place and ask about "moles" and what they have to rent for getting conduit under a driveway. Around here, there are lots of choices.My dad bought this house a couple years ago. Put in a new driveway last year. Had a flagpole put in last week. He wants a hardwired light system to light the the flag. Unfortunately the silly driveway is in the way.
What's the best DIY way to pound a pipe under the driveway? Is there a machine we can rent? Trying to save the old man money.
I have that unit, it works great….within reason. Large rocks or real long distances mess with it. Hard to prevent it from going too deep, but works ok.Maybe this as an option; BorZit Systems.
That's an idea. Cut where the asphalt meets the concrete.I had to replace a water line that crossed an asphalt driveway. I elected to route the line next to the garage door. That way I only had to make one cut. It also meant I didn't have a patch in the middle of the drive, which I figured would never be quite right. The patch I did make was the transition from the drive to the concrete garage floor.
Doug in SW IA
I would try a bigger set of panels and a large battery. Basically, I oversize the solar side of it to get through the inevitable ten days of grey weather. The cheap solar that I have seen use low efficiency/quality solar panels, low quality batteries, and yes, they don't last worth diddly. We run solar for a few things, and I have found that a 20-50W panel and an automotive battery in a case with the charger to be pretty solid, and low cost. You can use sealed lead acid or lithium, but they are more expensive. If it were me, I would start the plan from the wattage on the light, and your winter sun levels, available at PVWattsThat's an idea. Cut where the asphalt meets the concrete.
I tried to talk him into solar but all the ones he used before don't last long.