Borehole-Driller.co.uk

Water well Drilling and Deep Bore Soakaways. Based in Kent. Covering London, Essex and the South of England.

Home
Contact Us
About Us
Water Well Drilling
Water Well Filtration
Water Well Problems
Iron removal
Deep Bore Soakaways
Renewable Heat Incentive
Open Loop Geothermal
Closed Loop Geothermal
Restricted Access
Borehole Pumps
Pump Installation
Borehole Prices
Well Casing Installation
Buy Water Well Casing
Syphon or Siphon Heads
News Headlines
Customer Testimonials
Site Map
Links
Deep Bore Soakaways
 
 
Deep Bore Soakaway.
Pause Stop Previous Next View full-sized photos
 

Deep bore soakaways are the most effective and low cost solution to drainage problems.

There is no need to have your existing soakaway replaced, we can recommission your existing soakaway to work perfectly.

Certain rural areas of Kent are high above the chalk aquifer making them unsuitable for water well drilling but perfect for deep bore soakaways. If you are not connected to the mains sewerage system you will be aware of the high cost of emptying your septic tank or Klargester and how quickly it fills up. Most septic tanks are also connected to soakaways to drain away the excess water. Sometimes the soakaways are situated in clays which are not suitable for the purpose and become ineffective very quickly. They also tend to silt up over time which stops the water from draining away.

Usually the solution is to have the soakaway emptied and then cleaned out, this can be extremely expensive - if you have a soakaway that isn't working correctly we are sure you are already aware of this!

A far more cost effective solution is to install a deep bore soakaway. There is no need to have the soakaway emptied or cleaned out. We drill through the base of your existing soakaway and carry on drilling until we find porous geology. We then install a well casing which will quickly drain all of the excess water. The installed well is positioned 1 metre above the base of the existing soakaway, this allows any silts which enter the soakaway to settle and not interfere with the drainage. No maintenance is required and you can look forward to trouble free drainage.

 

Please feel free to give us a call and receive a free no obligation quote, we are always happy to answer any questions a client may have.

For  those of  you who would like a little more detail please read on.

 

Technical detail

The deep bored soakaway consists primarily of two parts, a conventional chamber and a narrow bore perforated liner, usually 100mm to 150mm dia. The chamber is constructed in more or less a similar manner as a conventional soakaway, but the chamber is used solely for storage.

The chamber is generally formed wholly from non-perforated rings. The size of the chamber is dependant on how much water flow will come into the chamber at peak flow and how quickly the water runs away down the soakaway pipe.

In exceptional circumstances the lower part of the chamber may be perforated, provided the perforations commence a minimum of one metre into a suitable permeable strata. Passing through the base, which again can be concrete, is a plastic or steel liner usually 100 to 150mm in diameter in Kent, although in exceptional circumstances diameters of between 80 and 300mm have been used.

Limitations in depth of the liner as a result of groundwater protection concerns are increasingly resulting in the use of 200mm and 250mm diameter liners. However for domestic use100mm pipe should be more than adequate. A call to your local buiding control or environment agency office should be able to advise if there are any special requirements.

The liners are inserted into a borehole drilled normally by a cable percussion shell and auger or rotary auger rig depending upon the underlying geology, with the diameter of the borehole a minimum of 50mm greater than the outside diameter of the liner. The plastic liner is perforated over the permeable layer to facilitate discharge of the surface water run-off into the surrounding soil and as such its length is dependent upon the required soakage rate although it may be limited in depth by the requirements of the environment Agency to avoid contaminating a water aquifer.

A section of non perforated liner is normally installed to below the interface with the soakage

medium and the overlying relatively impermeable soils. It is recommended that the non-perforated liner penetrates at least 2 metres into the soakage medium. Between the perforated liner and the side of the borehole is a gap which is backfilled with 'pea-gravel' or similar typically 10mm in size and up to 20mm maximum size. Like the granular material

surrounding a conventional chamber this helps to disperse the water evenly from the liner perforations into the soil and backfills the void between the borehole and the liner to allow the installation of the bentonite seals above the perforated section of the pipe.

As the diameter of the borehole is more controlled than the dimensions of the conventional chamber excavation, the soakage area of the liner is taken as the borehole diameter. Above this annulus of granular material lies a bentonite seal which restrains the water to below this level even when the run off backs up into the chamber. For particularly sensitive sites it may be appropriate to introduce a reducing coupling local to the grouted area to enable a thicker annulus of grout to be obtained (eg reduce 150mm perforated pipe to 100mm plain pipe at or below the grouted zone and extend 100mmpipe into the chamber) and/or increase the depth of the seal above the standard depth increment of 2 metres. Capping the liner which protrudes one metre above the base of the chamber is a syphon head placed to prevent the blockage of the deep bore. This also helps to inhibit the ingress of silt or foreign objects into the liner. Access into the soakaway chamber to install the syphon head must be treated as a

confined space if at any significant depth and can only be undertaken with the necessary safety precautions (Gas detector, safety harness, tripod winch, backup team etc). We use a custom made syphon head which can be lowered over the soakaway pipe which negates the need to enter the chamber. The deep bored soakaway intercepts far fewer joints than the conventional soakaway and therefore relies upon the driving head developed by the water column to force the run-off through the available fissures that are encountered in the side of the borehole.

This installation is prone to smearing the fissures in the borehole which further reduces the soakage rate. Undertaking a series of soakage tests as aborehole is deepened and then installing a soakaway liner can increase the risk of smearing of the joints and will require testing of the installed liner to confirm the soakage rates. The field tests do, however, satisfactorily model the capacity of the deep bored soakaway generally being of a similar diameter to the proposed liner. Field tests on the installed liners are possible and less

water is generally required to demonstrate the liner capacity compared to a conventional soakaway although tankers will often be required to fully justify the capacity of the deeper liner systems in highly permeable strata. These tests would be needed if the soakaway was for perhaps a housing estate, but for domestic use a water bowser and pump test would suffice.

In general terms drilling within the Alluvial gravels and chalk can be undertaken by conventional cable percussion (shell and auger) techniques.The 'rock-like' structure of the Lower Tunbridge Wells Sands and especially the Hythe Beds often precludes the use of the light percussion rig methods. In such deposits it is necessary to utilise rotary coring drilling techniques. The costs of this specialist drilling is however quite high, typically 2 to 4 times that of cable percussion rig work. In some circumstances it may be advantageous to employ a light percussion rig to drill through the overburden materials and prove the position of the underlying 'rock' strata.

Once this has been undertaken the more expensive specialist rotary drilling rig can be brought onto site to complete the works. For brown field sites, whilst the liners themselves may be in suitable strata, the chambers and/or inlet pipes may be in loose Made Ground. Settlement of the chamber and/or opening of joints in the inlet pipes will stop some of the water reaching the soakaway liner which may result in surface settlements and/or washouts. It is therefore important to consider the need for ground improvement local to the soakaway chamber and greater flexibility in the inlet pipes on larger scale soakaways.

Whether it’s a water well or a soakaway, contact us to discuss your requirements. We guarantee to beat any genuine drilling quote!!!