Septic System - Infiltrator System

   / Septic System - Infiltrator System #52  
Is the $800 difference total, delivered, excavated and set?
 
   / Septic System - Infiltrator System
  • Thread Starter
#55  
Then 2500 is the way I would go if it were me.

I agree. The $800 is nothing compared to having the extra safety margin. For me, it was more the fact that the tank is so big that I was a little worried about the size of it but I will put down 6" of compacted base material.

Nobody ever says, geez I wish I put in a smaller tank. It's always the opposite, when the tank gets overloaded on special occasions (party, family visit, etc), that's when people wish they had a larger tank.
 
   / Septic System - Infiltrator System #56  
Should I go with a Distribution Box or the installer offered an alternative that doesn't use a D-Box but just feeds directly into the leach fields first line?
I am leaning towards a D-Box since it distributes the waste evenly among all 4 leach field lines, instead of just feeding 1 field and then overflowing into the 2nd field.


D-box. No question. Distribute the load evenly. Give the soil a better chance to keep up with the load, rather than wait for one to get overloaded, then overflow.

When I replaced mine a couple of years ago, I added a 4" PVC pipe up to the surface, topped with a clean-out. Now I can inspect, add chemicals, or whatever, as needed.

The other question is in regards to the backfill over the infiltrator chambers. It can be native soil (which is rocky and silty). I am considering putting down washed 3/4" gravel over the chambers which will help prevent silt from getting into the chambers.


No it won't. It will just slow it down, a bit. Only a bit. I'm currently putting in a French drain which connects to a recently installed French drain on my neighbor's property. It was put in by a ... not very good contractor who didn't use any filter cloth under the gravel, just some Cheapo weed barrier on top. That "drain" has been in place all of two, maybe three months, and when we opened it up to make the connection, we found the gravel is already well-infiltrated with silt.

And it's been pretty dry here until the last few days!

I will also put down landscape fabric/geotextile OVER the chamber tops prior to backfilling to also help with preventing silt from getting into the chambers.


That might help, but I'm not sure even that is needed. If you are going to do it, though, get the good stuff. 3.5 to 4 oz, not the weed barrier junk you get at the home store.
 
   / Septic System - Infiltrator System
  • Thread Starter
#57  
D-box. No question. Distribute the load evenly. Give the soil a better chance to keep up with the load, rather than wait for one to get overloaded, then overflow.

That might help, but I'm not sure even that is needed. If you are going to do it, though, get the good stuff. 3.5 to 4 oz, not the weed barrier junk you get at the home store.

I am going with the Mutual Industries WF200 Polyethylene Woven Geotextile Fabric. It looks like heavy duty fabric.
 
   / Septic System - Infiltrator System #58  
FWIW - I think you are probably stressing out way more than necessary. Chances are that the septic guys are pretty familiar with what system will work in your area given the soils that are present. They are probably more qualified in your area than anyone you are likely to find on here. Lay down the extra $800, get the larger tank, and move on. In a year from now, when your system is functioning as designed, it will seem like an insignificant aspect of your overall project.
 
   / Septic System - Infiltrator System
  • Thread Starter
#59  
FWIW - I think you are probably stressing out way more than necessary. Chances are that the septic guys are pretty familiar with what system will work in your area given the soils that are present. They are probably more qualified in your area than anyone you are likely to find on here. Lay down the extra $800, get the larger tank, and move on. In a year from now, when your system is functioning as designed, it will seem like an insignificant aspect of your overall project.

Point taken.

I am a "belt & suspender" type of guy when it comes to this stuff. I tend to "over-engineer" things so as to prevent future problems. I've seen and dealt with too many shoddy jobs in my time and when it comes to my house, I always research and design it so that I don't have to deal with problems later on. I've learned that it's better to pay a little more now than later on to go back and fix something which will cost triple the costs.
 
   / Septic System - Infiltrator System #60  
Point taken.

I am a "belt & suspender" type of guy when it comes to this stuff. I tend to "over-engineer" things so as to prevent future problems. I've seen and dealt with too many shoddy jobs in my time and when it comes to my house, I always research and design it so that I don't have to deal with problems later on. I've learned that it's better to pay a little more now than later on to go back and fix something which will cost triple the costs.

Same here for anything critical like that. Little things I tend to roll the dice on, but not something like a septic tank. Gotta do it right.
 

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