Dan,

Your explanation to Blaine was helpful for me too in better understanding
your dilemma. I wonder why they felt that amount of pitch was necessary for
drainage? Also, by your excellent description I'm guessing you lost a net of
about 3+ inches for ceiling clearance. Will this present future issues?

Al
  -----Original Message-----
  From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]]on Behalf Of Dan Rossi
  Sent: Tuesday, March 16, 2010 8:24 AM
  To: [email protected]
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] Basement floor update.



  Blaine,

  The issue with my basement, as most folks here are painfully aware, after
  my years of wining about it, is that the cement floor is dramatically
  sloped to a center drain. The basement is only 15 feet wide, and thus, in
  the 7.5 feet from the side wall to the drain, the floor drops a little
  over six inches. I can't put furniture down there with the floor sloping
  so much. It just wouldn't be practical. So, I am building a suspended
  floor arrangement.

  There are three main beams, one at either end, and one in the middle.
  They span the basement from side wall to side wall, and encompass the
  middle third of the length of the basement. Forward of this area will
  eventually be my shop, and aft of this area is the mechanicles, the
  washer, dryer, furnace, water heater, blah blah blah.

  Imagine a 2X4 laying on it's face spanning the basement, it's ends just
  touching the cement floor at the walls. Then, under that is a 2X6 but the
  2X6 is shorter than the 2X4. Then under the 2X6 are blocks of 2X6 and 1X6
  and various other wedges and such so that the beam is nearly solid but
  follows the profile of the cement floor below.

  Then I laid 2X4 joists on their flat faces across the beams. I had to put
  blocks under the 2X4 joists because they really aren't very rigid that
  way.

  Now, as far as the pipes go. basically, I am just hoping to convince any
  water from an over flowing washer or exploded water heater, to go to the
  pipe entrance, rather than just flow under the floor, spreading out and
  wetting more than is necessary. The pipe will just lay under the floor
  and empty at the central drain in the middle of the basement floor.

  The middle beam is actually split at the center and I am building in a
  trap door over the central drain so that I can easily get at it if
  necessary.

  I also installed an external basement door last summer, so I intend on
  putting some drainage line from the door, under the floor to the central
  drain as well. Just in case the door well outside floods and water starts
  seeping in under the door.

  Luckily, the basement isn't all that submerged. Maybe 3.5 feet at the
  front of the house, and less than a foot at the back of the house.

  Oh yeah, there will eventually be walls enclosing this middle third of the
  basement, making a nice additional room in this very tiny house.

  --
  Blue skies.
  Dan Rossi
  Carnegie Mellon University.
  E-Mail: [email protected]
  Tel: (412) 268-9081


  


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