Thanks for showing real repairs, I've seen more than a few where they have some guy down there with the water still turned on just trying to show off like a jackass.
Better you than me and better there than here and it's cold here in South Carolina and I'm just glad it's after Thanksgiving and I've got no clogged toilet calls thank God LOL keep up the good work keep your boots dry like that's possible
I feel your pain, I worked for a public utility in st.Louis for 46 years. Drawings are never wrong, but they are seldom right either. And don’t get a locate company to find it for you they are ALWAYS wrong. Stay safe guys.
I disagree about Locates Firms somewhat. At least in my area if you call a locates firm and they come out and tell you where & how deep the buried pipes are, and those pipes aren't where locates said they would be, then you aren't liable for any damage / costs associated with repairing the inevitable breakage. Do it without having locates come out, your on the hook for any damages.
Jesus is the only way to healing, restoration and salvation to all souls. Please turn to him and he will change your life, depression into delight, soul heading from hell to heaven all because of what he did on the cross “Whoever calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved” Romans 10:13
I watched this with a bit of anxiety. Maybe five years ago a private contractor was digging on Dartmouth Street in Boston. A water main broke while they were digging with shovels beneath it inside the hole. Two hard-working men drowned. I learned a lot about the dangers, codes, regulations, and permits in the weeks after. Driving by work crews now is an ominous reminder of the dangers they face.
Great work guys, I can tell you if you guys were working on my street I would be talking to you. Moved to Dunedin,Fl in 1988 and all our city guys are great like you guys.
Jesus is the only way to healing, restoration and salvation to all souls. Please turn to him and he will change your life, depression into delight, soul heading from hell to heaven all because of what he did on the cross “Whoever calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved” Romans 10:13
we have over 4,400 valves in our system 4" through 30" and we constantly dig down repack and rebuild them with stainless steel bolts. they are 100 years old and will probably last my lifetime with those repairs
We've repaired a few. Definitely bolts are a major issue. I have a video of us repairing one. Unfortunately the main blew right beside it several months later and had to pull it. Was a leaded in valve.
G'day, been in the repair business for 34yrs, if i excavated another stainless steel clamp on a cast iron concrete lined main 'cicl' would recommend replacing from collar to collar. If this was not possible, cut the cast and tap the removed piece with a hammer to determine whether the crack has travelled further. Wedge up the the class12 pvc main to stop it putting weight pressure on the existing cicl too. Good work ethic!
enjoyed watching the repair of the line we just had our water dist out to replace the 1 inch plastic pipe to our meter w copper the line had been in the ground 63 years then it started leaking
Jesus is the only way to healing, restoration and salvation to all souls. Please turn to him and he will change your life, depression into delight, soul heading from hell to heaven all because of what he did on the cross “Whoever calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved” Romans 10:13
I worked city maintenance for several years repairing AC pipe. After each repair we used fire hydrants to blow out the air and flush the pipe. How did you blow out the air or maybe you didn't show that part of the process.
We always try to flush a hydrant nearby. I don't believe this section of main had a hydrant on it so we would not have been able to flush it that way. Sometimes we'll pull a meter and run it that way but it takes way longer!
Jesus is the only way to healing, restoration and salvation to all souls. Please turn to him and he will change your life, depression into delight, soul heading from hell to heaven all because of what he did on the cross “Whoever calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved” Romans 10:13
We had just got that trailer. It's been great. We actually have more goodies in it now like our lights, barricades, and extra pumps now. It's a real timesaver!
Jesus is the only way to healing, restoration and salvation to all souls. Please turn to him and he will change your life, depression into delight, soul heading from hell to heaven all because of what he did on the cross “Whoever calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved” Romans 10:13
Looked like they didnt tamp under the pipe or compact the backfill material in lifts. Might get away with that on ductile iron but cutting corners on asbestos concrete mains doesnt fly.
I was getting paid 12 dollars an hour at age 18 working with a jamaican that's accent was stronger than hulk himself doing the exact same thing except they couldn't reduce pressure on most of the breaks cause the valves where so old water pressure so high you had to set up your repair beside the problem and slide it on otherwise you wasn't going to get it fixed much respect love watching these vids
That’s pretty funny evidently you didn’t read that bill because literally only $400,000 actually goes to infrastructure so the fact that any of that would make it to the small town I wouldn’t doubt it highly
@@TimMcArdle On the AC fanclub FB page, yeah I drop a comment there sometimes, cool you noticed. It was a while since I gave his UA-cam page a comment, figure that there are plenty as it is but perhaps it could be a way to help him grow even more.
You should grease, wax tape, and wrap those macro couplings with 10 mil tape before you backfill. This will help minimize corrosion and make it easier when you have to dig up the rest of that pipe down the road. Also some locating tape a foot above the pipe is a good idea. Lastly, those couplings have a torque rating of 65 psi, after initial tightening you’re supposed to wait 10 minutes and then confirm you’re still tightened to 65 psi
They banned denso tape about 15 years ago where I am from for hygiene reasons. The bolts on couplings used since are already rotting away, plenty of work for me.
Jesus is the only way to healing, restoration and salvation to all souls. Please turn to him and he will change your life, depression into delight, soul heading from hell to heaven all because of what he did on the cross “Whoever calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved” Romans 10:13
@@mikehunt8823 what hygiene reasons are thoes? where I am denso wrap and pvc overwrap are still standard practice (also mandatory) and the wrap shouldnt ever be in contact with the water unless you installed something wrong?
In the little town that I live in less than 300 people occasionally they do have a water main break from mostly the old Transite pipe. And sometimes it splits again. The part I don’t like for the workers is that occasionally this happens in the dead of winter. That certainly sucks.
I miss the days of getting calls at 3am when its 5 degrees out once it was so cold the valves to cut pressure were frozen solid along with our pump so I threw on some waders and got in the trench when I put the collar on and tightened it down the wrench I was using froze to my hand oh and BTW because one of the lines we worked was live that shift ended up being 22 hours straight (so long we all had to call people to pick us up from the break because we were so tired by the end of that shift the company didn't want to risk being responsible for any of us wrecking because we fell asleep behind the wheel) all the guys working that shift were running off of was caffeine, nicotine, 7-Eleven taquitos and the few minutes of sleep you got riding in the truck from site to site🤣
I’m new to this Water World, I was told to ensure that there could be no voids under the repaired pipe. That someone should pack the fill under the pipe until it was completely filled to at least the mid level of the repair. In the Video all’s I saw was fill dropped on the pipe. Was I instructed correctly?
We're in central Illinois. Man I feel for you guys! Ours average anywhere from 3 to 5 feet generally. That would definitely suck digging so deep just to do minor repairs.
No light gravel underneath it and around? In Norway, that would make the area around the pipes move with season, and make it leak again soon because of pressure when the soil sets, and the pipe gets pressed down because not enough filling and packing around the pipe.
Yeah, we're lucky in that aspect. Someone from Minnesota commented the other day about their deep pipes. That would definitely be a nightmare! Trailer has been awesome! Saved many trips for stuff we don't carry normally.
Have you run across any hollowed-out trees that are used for water pipe? About 10 years ago the water district replaced about a 50' section of hollow tree water pipe. They think it's the last in the city.
Can’t tell you how many clamps, and that old cast pipe we replaced over the years when I did that kind of work. When we would get big temperature swings we were sure to get the over time. We could almost hear the pipes pop.
I guess everyone does it little differently, we have to use Vac-Trucks, not allowed to pump the sediment laced water down the street to eventually water ways! we also use a tool called a jumping jack to compact the backfill, when you don't, it seems that you have settlement issues, which causes ditch or road failure:( Do like those new style repair couplings, pricey though:)
We have a lot of PVC water mains in our area. Our system runs about 62 psi and it's rated for well over that. Anything new we install we use C900 plastic. Stuff is between 1/2” to 3/4 thick. We still use copper for service lines but never mains.
Good job, what type of couplings are you using? we use Viking Johnson’s, sometimes getting on the bottom bolts can be awkward i much prefer the look of yours. We got a new type of repair clamp recently, connectaclamps. They lock together so makes it easier to do long splits if you can’t get a shutdown.
If people knew what the inside of these water mains looked like they would not drink the water. I used to work for Florida keys Aqueduct Authority[FKAA] out of Marathon Florida. The pipe [ductile iron] started out 36 inch[200 psi] on the mainland and ran 150 miles to Key West where it changed to 8 inch asbestos [transite] mains. Went over 44 bridges. Pretty good job. Whats blue and sleeps two? A Florida Keys aqueduct truck]LOL
I work for the city’s water department here in town I love man doing water taps repairing mains doing some of them live I just hate my week on call lol
Great video!! interesting to see what other countries do. I have had to put water and sewer mains in over 10 feet and services to housing at the same depth across a street. Decided to become a ticketed plumber. I remember replacing a live active sewer that was flowing because of a guy with an excavator digging a electrical and gas trench pulled right through it without checking for depth of the sewer line beforehand. Had to cut through it with the gas cut off saw getting soaked with "white mice" (tampons) and other stuff. the rooster tail was awful.
Jesus is the only way to healing, restoration and salvation to all souls. Please turn to him and he will change your life, depression into delight, soul heading from hell to heaven all because of what he did on the cross “Whoever calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved” Romans 10:13
@@HaroutBlack don’t worry about my soul, for I have not been condemned to hell. The church and its members and those who have sinned against me, it is their souls that need protection from hell. For they hid behind the holy bible while committing their sins. For their judgment day cometh and I have forgiven them for their offence against me. They will never be forgotten tho. I have faced the devil he is an unworthy opponent.
Great commentary and editing. I think you should take your show on the road. Meaning, visit different cities and record their crews doing repairs on water mains. You can also have someone add commentary who teaches water distribution courses.
Jesus is the only way to healing, restoration and salvation to all souls. Please turn to him and he will change your life, depression into delight, soul heading from hell to heaven all because of what he did on the cross “Whoever calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved” Romans 10:13
That clay sand doesn't really compress too much when we fill a hole with it. I cut it out but the truck dumped a few times and I did pack with the machine but we usually don't have to many settling problems. We flowable fill holes on main streets and that works nicely.
Your right. We had no compaction equipment at the time and the department never had before us. We actually do have a compactor now for road jobs. Trying to get where we don't have to deal with settling however we actually don't have too many issues with the sand we use. We definitely spend more time on better roads. This one was redone a while after this and is good today.
@@TimMcArdle there is something about seeing old equipment still doing the same work as new equipment without the high cost. It's paid for itself so many times it's laughable
Map your water valve locations from landmarks fire hydrants property lines other landmarks say 22 feet west & 18 feet north AWWA 1/2 turn specs for a gate water valve to close are 3 times the valve size plus 3 times 2 = 1/2 turns to close Example 6" valve 3x6 = 18 + 3 = 21 x 2 = 42 make Shure it is open first the stem is brass it will brake with horizontal splits most of the time it is best to cut out replace if not clean and find end of crack drill or saw to keep crack from traveling more.
Very true, we actually have for the most part good maps and drawings of our lines and valves, however we do find a few mistakes now and again. We try to correct them when discovered.
I work facility maintenance and had this happen. We measured wrong on the mini excavator and thought it was too tall to fit under a covered walkway so we had to dig about 7 feet down by hand to put a clamp on.
No, sewer lines under the street are usually 3-4 inches. If you opened the manwhore cover on the street and look down inside, you'll see the lines that connect to it are fairly small.
Hey, nice work! I saw where you said you're in central IL. I'm also in central IL and applied for a city water job where I'll be involved in these repairs.. How many of these do you typically have in a year? Does it happen more often in winter? Any advice appreciated.
Thanks! Depends on the town your in. Older towns that have alot more old mains probably fight them more. We're about 11,000 people and don't have too many issues honestly. And oddly enough, most of our problems happen in the summer or spring when the ground is dry or thawing. Seems like there's more movement in the ground during those times. We all enjoy our jobs and have fun doing it.
@@TimMcArdle Appreciate your feedback. I'm in Macomb. It's almost 100 years old and 22,000 population. I've been trying to learn about water main repairs because it seems like that's the bummer part of the job. Water plant operator. I'm unsure if I want to leave my maintenance job at a facility for the city job, which pays more. Maybe I won't even get an interview, who knows 🤔
Well we had a tally going at the shop but lost track. We had a section of main that was popping right and left early this year. Literally down there once every 3 to 4 weeks. Made a couple videos of them. We generally don't see maybe 1 or 2 a month or so average I'd say.
Good work on the repair but with clear lack of regard for proper PPE I worry one of your guys will get hurt. Cool to see how you guys do it. Sending good vibes from a project engineer out of NYC!
What ppe are they missing other than hard hats and safety glasses i don't even wear safety glasses during live breaks (except when using road saw) when waters spraying everywhere and we can't cut pressure because when that water spraying everywhere gets on your glasses you cant see shit and they don't need a cage because it looks like that trench is under 6 feet deep
A classic example of why you NEVER use a repair clamp on a lengthwise split!!!! In my experience (40 years), it will fail 70% of the time. And when you see another clamp 8" away, it kinda indicates the pipe is a piece of shit!!! Go as far as decent pipe, cut it out and replace with new pipe and 2 dresser couplings. You have to shut down but so what???, it's a lot longer lasting repair
Nah it look like that was a split you never put a clamp on a split unless real small then you can score the ends so it doesn’t run. With the other clamps I would’ve just cut it out in the first place.
We can't use plastic, ductile only,, they're a pain in the you know what, I don't care it all pays but it lasts forever. I was watching Columbia Gas putting in a huge gas Main in throughout Pennsylvania, those boys they work hard and they work fast, under the river over the mountain to Grandma's house they go.
These are the type of guys who likes to make work days better having fun and joking around but getting the job done as well right. Good job guys
Thanks for showing real repairs, I've seen more than a few where they have some guy down there with the water still turned on just trying to show off like a jackass.
Better you than me and better there than here and it's cold here in South Carolina and I'm just glad it's after Thanksgiving and I've got no clogged toilet calls thank God LOL keep up the good work keep your boots dry like that's possible
I feel your pain, I worked for a public utility in st.Louis for 46 years. Drawings are never wrong, but they are seldom right either. And don’t get a locate company to find it for you they are ALWAYS wrong. Stay safe guys.
I disagree about Locates Firms somewhat. At least in my area if you call a locates firm and they come out and tell you where & how deep the buried pipes are, and those pipes aren't where locates said they would be, then you aren't liable for any damage / costs associated with repairing the inevitable breakage. Do it without having locates come out, your on the hook for any damages.
Jesus is the only way to healing, restoration and salvation to all souls. Please turn to him and he will change your life, depression into delight, soul heading from hell to heaven all because of what he did on the cross
“Whoever calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved” Romans 10:13
I’m a utility Locator and I guarantee you ANY contractor will trust me before he trust you to Locate anything .
The only way to accurately locate anything is with an old timer and witching sticks
@@TheDrew2022 at 6:47 could you use a submergible sump pump for that water and and a screen on the bottom to protect the pump
Top Job ! Is very funny to see the water of the sump pump is back to the hole. 😅
Yeah we kinda had a nice water feature going on there. 😆
I watched this with a bit of anxiety. Maybe five years ago a private contractor was digging on Dartmouth Street in Boston. A water main broke while they were digging with shovels beneath it inside the hole. Two hard-working men drowned. I learned a lot about the dangers, codes, regulations, and permits in the weeks after. Driving by work crews now is an ominous reminder of the dangers they face.
Awesome video. Thank you guys
Great work guys, I can tell you if you guys were working on my street I would be talking to you. Moved to Dunedin,Fl in 1988 and all our city guys are great like you guys.
Jesus is the only way to healing, restoration and salvation to all souls. Please turn to him and he will change your life, depression into delight, soul heading from hell to heaven all because of what he did on the cross
“Whoever calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved” Romans 10:13
we have over 4,400 valves in our system 4" through 30" and we constantly dig down repack and rebuild them with stainless steel bolts. they are 100 years old and will probably last my lifetime with those repairs
We've repaired a few. Definitely bolts are a major issue. I have a video of us repairing one. Unfortunately the main blew right beside it several months later and had to pull it. Was a leaded in valve.
@@TimMcArdle I would say that's what at least 75% of ours are
Watching this is almost as much fun as going to work.
Resembled it eerily closely didn't it?
@@TimMcArdle every water break. If there was a flood, you should get a submergible sump pump when you go to water main break floods
"I really don't want to, but they pay me to." I got that Derek trained right.
G'day, been in the repair business for 34yrs, if i excavated another stainless steel clamp on a cast iron concrete lined main 'cicl' would recommend replacing from collar to collar.
If this was not possible, cut the cast and tap the removed piece with a hammer to determine whether the crack has travelled further.
Wedge up the the class12 pvc main to stop it putting weight pressure on the existing cicl too.
Good work ethic!
enjoyed watching the repair of the line
we just had our water dist out to replace the 1 inch plastic pipe to our meter w copper the line had been in the ground 63 years then it started leaking
Hell yea love watching these
Very interesting videos. I am new to your channel and really enjoyed everything I have seen so far.
Great job you guys. Love these videos.
Jesus is the only way to healing, restoration and salvation to all souls. Please turn to him and he will change your life, depression into delight, soul heading from hell to heaven all because of what he did on the cross
“Whoever calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved” Romans 10:13
The parking of that tractor to the trailer, was epic! 💪🤙
I worked city maintenance for several years repairing AC pipe. After each repair we used fire hydrants to blow out the air and flush the pipe. How did you blow out the air or maybe you didn't show that part of the process.
We always try to flush a hydrant nearby. I don't believe this section of main had a hydrant on it so we would not have been able to flush it that way. Sometimes we'll pull a meter and run it that way but it takes way longer!
Nice work, it's never easy! Your guys need to have hearing protection when using that quick cut.
Jesus is the only way to healing, restoration and salvation to all souls. Please turn to him and he will change your life, depression into delight, soul heading from hell to heaven all because of what he did on the cross
“Whoever calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved” Romans 10:13
@5:19 nice presentation...I felt like all gear was being presented to me as the client...good collection there
We had just got that trailer. It's been great. We actually have more goodies in it now like our lights, barricades, and extra pumps now. It's a real timesaver!
@@TimMcArdle very cool
Awesome job ! I've been involved in a few of those.
Professionally done. You guys know your stuff.
Jesus is the only way to healing, restoration and salvation to all souls. Please turn to him and he will change your life, depression into delight, soul heading from hell to heaven all because of what he did on the cross
“Whoever calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved” Romans 10:13
Looked like they didnt tamp under the pipe or compact the backfill material in lifts. Might get away with that on ductile iron but cutting corners on asbestos concrete mains doesnt fly.
Very enjoyable video! Thanks for sharing.
I was getting paid 12 dollars an hour at age 18 working with a jamaican that's accent was stronger than hulk himself doing the exact same thing except they couldn't reduce pressure on most of the breaks cause the valves where so old water pressure so high you had to set up your repair beside the problem and slide it on otherwise you wasn't going to get it fixed much respect love watching these vids
We've been in that boat before! Thanks!
I wish we had lines this shallow , this is a walk in the park lol our lines here go from 8- 13 feet deep
Love it. Hopefully that new "inferstrucher bill " will help you out.
That’s pretty funny evidently you didn’t read that bill because literally only $400,000 actually goes to infrastructure so the fact that any of that would make it to the small town I wouldn’t doubt it highly
Cool video! I love that sign right where you work “Children at play” 😄Oh and it was Ants Pants shoutout that sent me here!
I appreciate that Nils! I see you on Camarata's page all the time! I'll have to thank Ants Pants for the mention! Love his stuff as well!
@@TimMcArdle On the AC fanclub FB page, yeah I drop a comment there sometimes, cool you noticed. It was a while since I gave his UA-cam page a comment, figure that there are plenty as it is but perhaps it could be a way to help him grow even more.
Good work team
This is what i do in Jamaica
You should grease, wax tape, and wrap those macro couplings with 10 mil tape before you backfill. This will help minimize corrosion and make it easier when you have to dig up the rest of that pipe down the road. Also some locating tape a foot above the pipe is a good idea. Lastly, those couplings have a torque rating of 65 psi, after initial tightening you’re supposed to wait 10 minutes and then confirm you’re still tightened to 65 psi
They banned denso tape about 15 years ago where I am from for hygiene reasons. The bolts on couplings used since are already rotting away, plenty of work for me.
Jesus is the only way to healing, restoration and salvation to all souls. Please turn to him and he will change your life, depression into delight, soul heading from hell to heaven all because of what he did on the cross
“Whoever calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved” Romans 10:13
@@HaroutBlackJesus don't heal pipes.
lmao @@ReadTheShrill
@@mikehunt8823
what hygiene reasons are thoes? where I am denso wrap and pvc overwrap are still standard practice (also mandatory) and the wrap shouldnt ever be in contact with the water unless you installed something wrong?
Split sleeves are a historical moment in human progress and development.
Here in Minnesota our mains are 8’ and if we seen a sleeve that close to another we would just cut new pipe in but fun to see how other states do it!
In the little town that I live in less than 300 people occasionally they do have a water main break from mostly the old Transite pipe. And sometimes it splits again. The part I don’t like for the workers is that occasionally this happens in the dead of winter. That certainly sucks.
I miss the days of getting calls at 3am when its 5 degrees out once it was so cold the valves to cut pressure were frozen solid along with our pump so I threw on some waders and got in the trench when I put the collar on and tightened it down the wrench I was using froze to my hand oh and BTW because one of the lines we worked was live that shift ended up being 22 hours straight (so long we all had to call people to pick us up from the break because we were so tired by the end of that shift the company didn't want to risk being responsible for any of us wrecking because we fell asleep behind the wheel) all the guys working that shift were running off of was caffeine, nicotine, 7-Eleven taquitos and the few minutes of sleep you got riding in the truck from site to site🤣
I’m new to this Water World, I was told to ensure that there could be no voids under the repaired pipe. That someone should pack the fill under the pipe until it was completely filled to at least the mid level of the repair. In the Video all’s I saw was fill dropped on the pipe. Was I instructed correctly?
Where are you guys located?? Mains are a lot more shallow than here up in Saskatchewan Canada. Deepest one I've worked on was 16 feet deep
We're in central Illinois. Man I feel for you guys! Ours average anywhere from 3 to 5 feet generally. That would definitely suck digging so deep just to do minor repairs.
@@TimMcArdle I'm not in the industry anymore, but I'll tell you some were not very fun haha. Keep up the good work! Love the videos!
We have C900, AC and ductile iron also, good work crew
No light gravel underneath it and around? In Norway, that would make the area around the pipes move with season, and make it leak again soon because of pressure when the soil sets, and the pipe gets pressed down because not enough filling and packing around the pipe.
We use sand a lot to backfill with. Flows in under and doesn't settle much.
Well.. at least it isn’t very deep. Up here, in Canada we have to have at least six feet of cover over our WMs Really like your trailer.
Yeah, we're lucky in that aspect. Someone from Minnesota commented the other day about their deep pipes. That would definitely be a nightmare! Trailer has been awesome! Saved many trips for stuff we don't carry normally.
Your guys are funny as hell!!!
We have a good time!
Have you run across any hollowed-out trees that are used for water pipe? About 10 years ago the water district replaced about a 50' section of hollow tree water pipe. They think it's the last in the city.
Not in use, but our super has a piece of one in our plant in a display case. Neat to see the way they use to do things ya know!
Can’t tell you how many clamps, and that old cast pipe we replaced over the years when I did that kind of work. When we would get big temperature swings we were sure to get the over time. We could almost hear the pipes pop.
Excellent work 👍
Thank you gents for keeping the city working!
I guess everyone does it little differently, we have to use Vac-Trucks, not allowed to pump the sediment laced water down the street to eventually water ways!
we also use a tool called a jumping jack to compact the backfill, when you don't, it seems that you have settlement issues, which causes ditch or road failure:(
Do like those new style repair couplings, pricey though:)
May have to get a little bigger machine and start replacing mains/valves, services on whole streets. Preventive maintenance.
🤣🤣🤣 That is not what our taxes and water fees are for silly.
Nice job.
Got any valves on that trailer?
Why did you use PVC for a water main when your dealing with such high pressure? Isn't PVC weaker than copper?
We have a lot of PVC water mains in our area. Our system runs about 62 psi and it's rated for well over that. Anything new we install we use C900 plastic. Stuff is between 1/2” to 3/4 thick. We still use copper for service lines but never mains.
@@TimMcArdle Thanks for the reply. Does C900 come in standard sizes two like 2"?
Not sure if you can get it that small. If we have something that small, it's usually some type of poly or PVC pipe. We keep 6" plus in C900.
Bloody freaking legends 👏 full sending never lifting 😏🤙mobbin deep 🙌 new sub love the vibes keep sending it
Im going to be a water operator for my city soon just trying to see if it will be any what similar to what frac operator does and it’s real similar .
Risky digging across the main like that but good job. We had a main blow apart 3 different spots in 3 days within 100ft of each other lol
Good job, what type of couplings are you using? we use Viking Johnson’s, sometimes getting on the bottom bolts can be awkward i much prefer the look of yours. We got a new type of repair clamp recently, connectaclamps. They lock together so makes it easier to do long splits if you can’t get a shutdown.
Romac romagrip I believe is what those are. Very handy!
Good job guys.
If people knew what the inside of these water mains looked like they would not drink the water. I used to work for Florida keys Aqueduct Authority[FKAA] out of Marathon Florida. The pipe [ductile iron] started out 36 inch[200 psi] on the mainland and ran 150 miles to Key West where it changed to 8 inch asbestos [transite] mains. Went over 44 bridges. Pretty good job. Whats blue and sleeps two? A Florida Keys aqueduct truck]LOL
These types of jobs are so under appreciated…. Just curious, is the water turned off and it’s just the residual pressure?
Yes just residual. More often than not, old valves don't seal 100% and will leak some.
I work for the city’s water department here in town I love man doing water taps repairing mains doing some of them live I just hate my week on call lol
❤those cheedar fries are slaminn bro😊
Cast iron got to love it
Great video!! interesting to see what other countries do. I have had to put water and sewer mains in over 10 feet and services to housing at the same depth across a street. Decided to become a ticketed plumber. I remember replacing a live active sewer that was flowing because of a guy with an excavator digging a electrical and gas trench pulled right through it without checking for depth of the sewer line beforehand. Had to cut through it with the gas cut off saw getting soaked with "white mice" (tampons) and other stuff. the rooster tail was awful.
Oh boy, what a nightmare!
Jesus is the only way to healing, restoration and salvation to all souls. Please turn to him and he will change your life, depression into delight, soul heading from hell to heaven all because of what he did on the cross
“Whoever calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved” Romans 10:13
Haha, lol@@HaroutBlack
@@HaroutBlack don’t worry about my soul, for I have not been condemned to hell. The church and its members and those who have sinned against me, it is their souls that need protection from hell. For they hid behind the holy bible while committing their sins. For their judgment day cometh and I have forgiven them for their offence against me. They will never be forgotten tho.
I have faced the devil he is an unworthy opponent.
What brand shovels are those??
Great commentary and editing. I think you should take your show on the road. Meaning, visit different cities and record their crews doing repairs on water mains. You can also have someone add commentary who teaches water distribution courses.
Jesus is the only way to healing, restoration and salvation to all souls. Please turn to him and he will change your life, depression into delight, soul heading from hell to heaven all because of what he did on the cross
“Whoever calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved” Romans 10:13
“Ain’t got no gas” Karl Childers!
I snorted when he did that
? Did you compact any lifts ????????
That clay sand doesn't really compress too much when we fill a hole with it. I cut it out but the truck dumped a few times and I did pack with the machine but we usually don't have to many settling problems. We flowable fill holes on main streets and that works nicely.
We need to see more of muscle boy in the yellow muscle shirt!
no compaction?? i thought every two feet supposed to do compaction so road dont sink,???
Your right. We had no compaction equipment at the time and the department never had before us. We actually do have a compactor now for road jobs. Trying to get where we don't have to deal with settling however we actually don't have too many issues with the sand we use. We definitely spend more time on better roads. This one was redone a while after this and is good today.
I love the older excavator and trucks. When there good there good.
Ironically I just got a new truck and excavator. We still have the old ones and use them regularly as well. They're loyal!
@@TimMcArdle that old 331 is a GOAT 🐐
Everything I own personally is old stuff. Love buying old stuff and putting it back to work!
@@TimMcArdle there is something about seeing old equipment still doing the same work as new equipment without the high cost. It's paid for itself so many times it's laughable
Map your water valve locations from landmarks fire hydrants property lines other landmarks say 22 feet west & 18 feet north AWWA 1/2 turn specs for a gate water valve to close are 3 times the valve size plus 3 times 2 = 1/2 turns to close Example 6" valve 3x6 = 18 + 3 = 21 x 2 = 42 make Shure it is open first the stem is brass it will brake with horizontal splits most of the time it is best to cut out replace if not clean and find end of crack drill or saw to keep crack from traveling more.
Very true, we actually have for the most part good maps and drawings of our lines and valves, however we do find a few mistakes now and again. We try to correct them when discovered.
no asphalt?
This road actually got overlayed shortly after. It was originally some crappy oil, chip mix surface.
is blue brute pipe not standard over there?
Everything we install new we use C900 that's blue. Don't know if that's the same. We have a hodge podge of everything that is old here otherwise!
So they replaced a cast iron pipe with a PVC pipe, so what's the life expectancy of PVC buried in dirt? Just wondering...
Not sure. We have PVC that was installed in the mid 60's with no real issues.
I work facility maintenance and had this happen. We measured wrong on the mini excavator and thought it was too tall to fit under a covered walkway so we had to dig about 7 feet down by hand to put a clamp on.
lmao the ol just double band clamp side by side. i just hope you guys dont have any old transite lines.
Is the sewer main the same size as the water main?
No, sewer lines under the street are usually 3-4 inches. If you opened the manwhore cover on the street and look down inside, you'll see the lines that connect to it are fairly small.
Ah new pavement on the road how nice any any patches!
*Week later*
Need dig up here to fix water pipe.. >.
Hey, nice work! I saw where you said you're in central IL. I'm also in central IL and applied for a city water job where I'll be involved in these repairs.. How many of these do you typically have in a year? Does it happen more often in winter? Any advice appreciated.
Thanks! Depends on the town your in. Older towns that have alot more old mains probably fight them more. We're about 11,000 people and don't have too many issues honestly. And oddly enough, most of our problems happen in the summer or spring when the ground is dry or thawing. Seems like there's more movement in the ground during those times. We all enjoy our jobs and have fun doing it.
@@TimMcArdle Appreciate your feedback. I'm in Macomb. It's almost 100 years old and 22,000 population. I've been trying to learn about water main repairs because it seems like that's the bummer part of the job. Water plant operator. I'm unsure if I want to leave my maintenance job at a facility for the city job, which pays more. Maybe I won't even get an interview, who knows 🤔
No problem man, good luck to you!
@@TimMcArdle Thanks! How many water main leaks do you fix in a year?
Well we had a tally going at the shop but lost track. We had a section of main that was popping right and left early this year. Literally down there once every 3 to 4 weeks. Made a couple videos of them. We generally don't see maybe 1 or 2 a month or so average I'd say.
Are you guys a private company or municipal
Municipal.
@@TimMcArdle I find it hard to believe they don't have you in hard hats and high-viz vests.
We do wear high vis most times, we where on a closed dead end that day.
Good work on the repair but with clear lack of regard for proper PPE I worry one of your guys will get hurt.
Cool to see how you guys do it. Sending good vibes from a project engineer out of NYC!
What ppe are they missing other than hard hats and safety glasses i don't even wear safety glasses during live breaks (except when using road saw) when waters spraying everywhere and we can't cut pressure because when that water spraying everywhere gets on your glasses you cant see shit and they don't need a cage because it looks like that trench is under 6 feet deep
@@bassandbucks4282 Ear plugs needed and 1 guy did have glasses on I could see. I would have tamped it back in and put a valve in, otherwise good job.
When it's two clamps so close together, usually we remove the old one, and use a pipe between instead. And couplings instead of course.
Good job,,
What about asphalt?
Do we really have to see what all you have in your truck?
This in a small town?
We're about 11,400 people.
nice to see hard working HONEST MEN!!!!! not snow flakes sitting on their ((__I__)) wanting a free hand out!!!! GOD BLESS all of you!!!!!!
Thanks! We have a good time together and try to do our best.
Хорошая работа!
Спасибо!
14:21 - Billy Bob Thornton 😂😂
Good thing you only have to go a few feet down. Makes life easier for sure.
Canada buries their pipes deeeeep.
Trailer doesn’t have many hi maxes in it. I have a picture in my phone a 6’ section of 6” had 4 clamps on it 😂
At least none of 6 guys were tired at night
where are you guys from??
We're in Central Illinois
@@TimMcArdle where at I’m down In Edwardsville
@@Holtmann6 Taylorville
Im about to start working for he water department soon
I cannot believe that dude is standing in the hole while Bubba is digging inches from his legs. 02:15 .
Township EPA they've been making me put hay bales up Filter Fabric can't have that mud going into the streams, it's going to ruin the world😮😅
Oh boy. Don't want dirt to get in the dirt huh? 😂
Looks like that pipe is becoming nothing but patches!
Damm hate those pumps!
Are you a subcontractor to the water co?
We work for our municipality.
A classic example of why you NEVER use a repair clamp on a lengthwise split!!!! In my experience (40 years), it will fail 70% of the time. And when you see another clamp 8" away, it kinda indicates the pipe is a piece of shit!!! Go as far as decent pipe, cut it out and replace with new pipe and 2 dresser couplings. You have to shut down but so what???, it's a lot longer lasting repair
Nah it look like that was a split you never put a clamp on a split unless real small then you can score the ends so it doesn’t run. With the other clamps I would’ve just cut it out in the first place.
Not going to disagree with you honestly.
plastic remedi on metal pipe...
Nesesito trabajo urgente arreglando tubos del agua
We can't use plastic, ductile only,, they're a pain in the you know what, I don't care it all pays but it lasts forever. I was watching Columbia Gas putting in a huge gas Main in throughout Pennsylvania, those boys they work hard and they work fast, under the river over the mountain to Grandma's house they go.
Magic sand that needs no compaction.
Yes