Trenching downspouts

   / Trenching downspouts #21  
I suspect the same thing happens here, but never to any degree that has actually caused a problem with blockage or flow.

We get long winter stretches of 15 - 20F overnight lows with 30 - 35F daytime highs. So, average is below freezing, and ground stays relatively frozen, other than the top 1/2" taking the sun which softens each afternoon. The daytime sun will melt everything most days, with temperature anywhere near 32F, so water does flow into the pipes and probably freeze when it hits the cold pipe surface a foot or two underground.

We also get a few stretches most years of 0F to 20F days, but they rarely last much more than a week at a time, and then we're back up to that more typical 20F - 30F range.

Obviously not ideal, but it has just never caused a problem, at our latitude. The OP is in Ohio, so probably very similar weather to us, if not a little warmer.
This is one of the things people have trouble accepting, but it does work.

I am in Ohio, and where I live, there are no storm sewers.

Every home in my area discharges their downspouts into the drainage ditch at the street, which is less than 2' deep. My downspout drain's run about 15"-20" deep at bottom. You couldn't put them in below the frost line, on most properties here, if you wanted to.

Just like my sanitary drain, which is 12" deep, water isn't stored in there, it flows through it. Flowing water doesn't freeze, or, occur in down spouts during very cold weather. And, if the discharge is installed properly, the flowing water actually melts snow, and ice near it.

Yes, there is the potential for issues, if the installer doesn't pitch the pipes, or fails to allow for the discharge point to have sufficient area as to avoid the water pooling there. Like, if the pipe discharges in the bottom of a poorly draining ditch, that has standing water in it. Even then, the weather has to provide the right conditions for it to be a problem.
 
   / Trenching downspouts #22  
Amber, WA. I was going to make a joke about you probably knowing rainfall management better than the rest of us, based on widespread assumption that WA gets more rain than just about anywhere. But it turns out we get like 30% more rain than you, per year!
As we turned over to the new year - my Davis weather station registered - 15.73 inches of rainfall or equal( melted snow) for the entire year. This is right at our normal annual amount. Amber is in NE WA. Over on the dry side of the state.

Seattle and Olympia are on the wet side.

A REALLY wet day here will be 1/2 inch of rain in a 24 hour period.
 
   / Trenching downspouts #23  
ray66v - you have never lived where the flowing water gets REALLY cold. So very cold, 28F, that lenticular ice crystals form, sink to the bottom of a creek. The bottom builds up due to this weird action and the creek will actually overflow its banks.

This happens to both Campbell Cr and Chester Cr as they flow thru metropolitan Anchorage. Building lots along both creeks were at a premium price. Expensive homes became a local disaster as the creeks flooded them.

This is what you get when there are more real estate agents than common sense folks on your local zoning commision.
 
   / Trenching downspouts #24  
As we turned over to the new year - my Davis weather station registered - 15.73 inches of rainfall or equal( melted snow) for the entire year. This is right at our normal annual amount. Amber is in NE WA. Over on the dry side of the state.

Seattle and Olympia are on the wet side.

A REALLY wet day here will be 1/2 inch of rain in a 24 hour period.
Wow... that's dry. It's so easy to lump a whole state together, when looking at it from 3000 miles away.

We get about 50 inches per year, which ideally happens at a rate of 1" per week. But more often we see much more than 1" per week in April and November, with relatively dry mid-summer and mid-winter.
 
   / Trenching downspouts #25  
ray66v - you have never lived where the flowing water gets REALLY cold. So very cold, 28F, that lenticular ice crystals form, sink to the bottom of a creek. The bottom builds up due to this weird action and the creek will actually overflow its banks.
That's right, nor would I ever live there.

They have lots of issues in the arctic, the rest of the world doesn't.
 
   / Trenching downspouts #27  
Hmmm. I've certainly experienced the subsurface pipe filling with ice enough to block it. Usually the roof gets enough solar to start a melt, and the ground is still frozen. Under the right weather conditions, the ice slowly builds up.

@Tpondel if this is a concern, I would bury the pipes with 2" of foam board above it in the trench a couple of inches wider than the pipe.

I use a trencher, and I only use solid pipe because around here the perforated corrugated pipe only has a very short lifespan. I have used 4" solid pipe with holes about 25% of the way up the pipe. Those get geotextile lined trenches, with pea gravel, and there is a layer of geotextile around the pipe itself. My personal issue with geotextile is that there is always some size of dirt or sand that will plug it, so the geotextile will stop working at some point, which is why I prefer solid pipe.

If it works for you, my favorite is drainage swales. They don't plug, crush, or get easily blocked, but your site has to have the space and slope to support them.

All the best,

Peter
 
   / Trenching downspouts #28  
While planning the drainage it might be a good idea to consider any other improvements you might want to do while the trenching is open. I.e. water spickets, power outlets etc
 
   / Trenching downspouts #29  
I'd say your type of ground has a lot to do with what method you decide to use to dig.

Our property is very rocky and probably not the norm. We have lots of rocks ranging in size from a baseball to 1-2 feet in diameter. A trencher or most anything except a backhoe or excavator would be able to dig much more than 3-4" deep on our property. Almost every time I've dug a trench on our property I've had to find extra dirt to fill it in as I didn't want to put 1-2 foot diameter rocks back in on what I had laid in the trench.

I've also lived where the ground is very sand/loamy and you could a 2-3' deep hole in a matter of minutes by hand with long handled shovel. I was younger then and digging a 30' long trench by hand maybe would have taken a few hours.
 
   / Trenching downspouts #30  
If the pipe has enough drop to drain quickly, freezing isn’t a concern.
I dunno about that. My gutter downspouts fill completely with ice over the course of the winter, and they're vertical.
 

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