鲜花( 73) 鸡蛋( 0)
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发表于 2013-11-3 18:53
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越来越接近真理了!
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1 O7 w/ G/ F4 q! E+ i' J+ \January 27th, 2012, 17:47: E4 i$ [2 u5 ` O. X
When we build our new house, I want to install a floor drain for the garage to handle snow melt from the vehicles. Since I will also be using a heavy floor gasket under the garage doors (as a weather seal) water will pool to the inside if I don't drain it. I have this very problem in my current home. The door seal works too well!1 T0 o- p& C7 e% O) f
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My question - can I connect this drain to the footer drain outside (at the garage footing)? It will exit to daylight.
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) ^- b* D6 l" w3 ?! Z1 Lfatboy
* ~$ L1 U0 g! J# wJanuary 27th, 2012, 18:01% P2 ~( Z& P+ a* R3 f
Short answer, yes. In fact, a lot of jurisdictions (mine included) would require you daylight it rather than connecting to the sanitary sewer. Snow melt is stormwater, plus the added sand, and possible fluids from vehicles, don't want those in the sanitary system.$ B6 D" Z' h: d {8 _5 x9 D
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Darren Emery
/ @+ P; q1 v- a- V$ H0 x1 K) @January 27th, 2012, 18:066 f5 c5 {3 W* v5 _6 W
I would suggest you contact the AHJ. 5 years ago, our response would have been exactly as Fatboy's. Now - we require that drain into the sewer, precisely so we CAN take those fluids to the sanitary system, rather than allow it to enter the storm drainage system (can you say EPA?). If the garage is anything other than residential - grease/sand interceptor required.
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