New Room...Drain Hole

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  • htsteve
    Super Senior Member
    • Sep 2004
    • 1216

    New Room...Drain Hole

    I'm planning to put an HT room in my basement. The area I want/need to put it in has a drain hole in the floor. The hole would be approximately behind the left front speaker. Not ideal, to say the least. In my 14 years in the house, nothing has come up from the hole. However, there are other parts of my city were some people have had some issues. I've though of some ideas to deal with this as the room is built out. However, I'm looking for ideas, suggestions and anyone who has dealt with this and what was done about it.


    Thanks for any help.

    Steve
  • Kevin P
    Member
    • Aug 2000
    • 10808

    #2
    Put in a raised floor. Then you'll have a few inches of safety in case the basement floods for whatever reason, and you won't have to worry about the drain either.

    Comment

    • htsteve
      Super Senior Member
      • Sep 2004
      • 1216

      #3
      Originally posted by Kevin P
      Put in a raised floor. Then you'll have a few inches of safety in case the basement floods for whatever reason, and you won't have to worry about the drain either.

      Kevin,

      Thanks for the reply. That was my primary thought. Now for the novice question. Raise the floor for just the new HT room or the entire basement area? I suspect the whole area.

      Comment

      • Chris D
        Moderator Emeritus
        • Dec 2000
        • 16877

        #4
        Whole basement would really be best. If you do it right, you can use the raised floor to your advantage, too, making it acoustically strong by doing something like filling it with sand or at least insulation.
        CHRIS

        Well, we're safe for now. Thank goodness we're in a bowling alley.
        - Pleasantville

        Comment

        • Glen B
          Super Senior Member
          • Jul 2004
          • 1106

          #5
          With expensive equipment at risk, I would investigate whether there is any sort of check valve available that can be installed to prevent backup through the drainage system and not just rely on a raised floor.


          Comment

          • htsteve
            Super Senior Member
            • Sep 2004
            • 1216

            #6
            Originally posted by Glen B
            With expensive equipment at risk, I would investigate whether there is any sort of check valve available that can be installed to prevent backup through the drainage system and not just rely on a raised floor.

            Glen,

            Thanks for the information. I had wondered about any additional precautions, just in case there is a lot of water/backup. I'll look into it.

            Comment

            • Glen B
              Super Senior Member
              • Jul 2004
              • 1106

              #7
              Originally posted by htsteve
              Glen,

              Thanks for the information. I had wondered about any additional precautions, just in case there is a lot of water/backup. I'll look into it.
              See the link for the story where New York State legislators are looking to assist homeowners with the cost of installing check valves in their basements, to prevent sewage from backing up into their homes during storms. Apparently the installation work is not cheap but needs to be viewed in the context of helping to minimize the risk damage to a significant investment in A/V equipment. A past episode of the Discover Channel show Dirty Jobs, featured a Queens, NY basement cleanup after a couple feet of sewage backed up into the home.



              Comment

              • Lex
                Moderator Emeritus
                • Apr 2001
                • 27461

                #8
                oh gross event. Check valve seems like a really good idea. I actually saw one at work yesterday on a faucet outside at work, it did a pulse thing, and the preventive maintenance guy that I was shooting the breeze with at the time said it was just exactly that. To prevent sewage backup. I guess it affects the entire water system, I guess...
                Doug
                "I'm out there Jerry, and I'm loving every minute of it!" - Kramer

                Comment

                • Russ L
                  Senior Member
                  • Jul 2006
                  • 544

                  #9
                  I live in a floodplain. there are excellent checkvalves or back stops available. Make sure yours is a quality installation.
                  Russ

                  Comment

                  • Fred333
                    Member
                    • Oct 2007
                    • 45

                    #10
                    Yea nothing is worse then having a big storm and everything get ruined by bad installation job.
                    Always looking for a Scranton Web Design company.

                    Comment

                    • Russ L
                      Senior Member
                      • Jul 2006
                      • 544

                      #11
                      Drain hole... Home Audio/ Theater... only one solution, spend more. :dance:
                      Russ

                      Comment

                      • Fred333
                        Member
                        • Oct 2007
                        • 45

                        #12
                        Spending more is what we do best.
                        Always looking for a Scranton Web Design company.

                        Comment

                        • Eric S
                          Senior Member
                          • Sep 2000
                          • 175

                          #13
                          In our town, drain holes would routinely back up and spill (ok, thrust) sewage into basements during bad rain storms. Check with your water company or township to see if they are willing to come and permanently seal the hole closed for you.
                          My DIY Theater Projects

                          Comment

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