To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Should I bury my PVC downspouts in stone dirt or???

mc1984ss

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2008
Messages
218
Last week or so I posted a question about which type of PVC I should use to bury my downspouts. A lot of you are nice enough to reach out and help me. I apologize but I have another question. Should I lay the PVC in a bed of stone, pea gravel right in the dirt or????? This will not be buried below the frost line and I am in aWI. Like I mentioned in my other post, I always overthink projects like this. Thank you in advance, it is appreciated
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

larry4406

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 27, 2006
Messages
18,739
Location
Northern Virginia
Bury the piping in your native soils and monitor your pitch at 1/4" per foot.

If grade permits, we slice the discharge end at 45 degrees to try to blend it in with the yard for a daylit end.

Our house types use 6" gutters with 4x3" downspouts. We use 3" SCH40 PVC for up to 2 combined spout connections. When the run is piped to add in the flow from a 3rd or more downspout, we transition to 4" pipe before the 3rd or more spout joins the run.

Where the spout connects to the PVC rain leader, we are required to provide a method for overland relief. We do this by installing a wye with a bug screen. Should the rain leader become blocked or overwhelmed, it can discharge out the wye and run across the ground like it would without the piping.

Sometimes when the grade is not conducive to a baloney sliced end for daylight discharge, we use a pop-up drain with a small gravel drywell below it. In this picture below, you can see the rain leaders left and right of the stoop with the screen for overland relief. In the yard, you can see the green pop-up drains with the pit below which will be filled with gravel to the bottom of the popup elbow. We use NDS Pop-Up Emitter. There is a 3rd pop-up on the left which corresponds to the sump pump discharge under the window.

The pop-up has a small ~1/4" diameter weep hole at the bottom which allows it to fully empty. During rain event, the water flow pushes up the center disk allowing the water to then run along the surface.

1779273125386.jpeg

1779273574826.jpeg

We sometimes also use a leaf catcher arrangement at the connection to the downspout. These get used when the site plan requires us to discharge into large underground dissipation systems (drywells, Storm Tech Systems, etc) that are cost prohibitive to repair should they get plugged with organics.
Leaf Eater Side View.jpg
 

Attachments

  • 1779273487263.png
    1779273487263.png
    10.2 KB · Views: 9
  • 1779273506468.png
    1779273506468.png
    4 KB · Views: 9
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

75gmck25

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 21, 2014
Messages
1,310
Location
Alexandria, VA
I've seem some pipe in the area where they cut the end at a diagonal, and they had a green plastic end screen that was oval-shape so it fit into a 4" pipe, and blended into the grass. The end pieces appear to be something you can buy off-the-shelf, but I've not seen them in the local stores.
 
OP
M

mc1984ss

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2008
Messages
218
I've got them on order! We have plenty of rodents so I want to make sure nothing crawls up there
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom