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#144116 10/13/05 09:40 PM
Joined: Jul 2002
Posts: 8,443
Likes: 3
Trumpy Offline OP
Member
Ok,
I agree with what you guys are saying and I'd hate to see a lot of draconian laws be re-instated just for small instances like this.
The thing here with Self-Certification, is that if you were the last person who did work in the house in question (and had the sense to certify it) you can more or less expect a phone call if something else in the house goes wrong.
Kiwi,
Quote
As long as you alert the owner to any dangerous situations then the liability lies entirely with the owner.

Of course this doesn't help us sleep when the owner ignores our warnings.
I was talking to one of the Inspectors at work about this recently.
And he gave me some really good advice that will keep us in the clear.
Simply, all you have to do is write on your CoC, that you have warned the H/Owner of the other things that are non-compliant(that youve seen) and it is up to them to have it corrected.
Put it in writing on a legally binding form like a CoC and you have protection.
Easy eh??. [Linked Image]

#144117 10/14/05 08:00 AM
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 7,520
P
Member
Hmmm...

EC directives..... Fosse septique.

Best place for them! [Linked Image]

#144118 10/14/05 05:45 PM
Joined: Mar 2005
Posts: 1,803
Member
Arrete du 6 mai 1996: Only toilet-paper may be disposed of into assainssements non-collectifs. So unless the Directive is printed on 'Bounty' roll, sadly your suggestion is interdit. However, since politicians are mostly indistinguishable from bodily-wastes, it appears you could, ( in theory at least ), legally flush Neil Kinnock down the khazi.

*Or that Leon Britan, or whatever his blinking name is!

* edit for political balance.

Alan

[This message has been edited by Alan Belson (edited 10-14-2005).]


Wood work but can't!
#144119 10/15/05 12:40 AM
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 806
Member
Alan:

[Linked Image] [Linked Image] [Linked Image]

Heck, I may even learn some French hanging out here!


Stupid should be painful.
#144120 10/15/05 07:39 PM
Joined: Jul 2002
Posts: 8,443
Likes: 3
Trumpy Offline OP
Member
As far as septic systems go,
NZ is sitting on a ticking time-bomb.
A lot of the systems that were installed here in the 1950's and 1960's are now starting to breakdown.
This is over and above the fact that to a certain degree the outflow from these tanks was of extremely poor quality and with the systems of that era that are still in use, they are slowly polluting the aquifers here.
If you want to install a septic tank system, you are limited to a few certain designs these days, these new systems have an outflow of almost pure water (although I wouldn't drink it).
Local councils here are very hot on this sort of thing.
One guy here locally was made to remove his newly installed tank, because he never read the Resource Consent that came with the permit for the septic installation.
Silly Boy!.

#144121 10/16/05 04:35 AM
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 7,520
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Quote
So unless the Directive is printed on 'Bounty' roll, sadly your suggestion is interdit.
Mais Alan, vous êtes en France! On oublie les règles! Elles sont pour les autres, n'est-ce pas? [Linked Image]

Quote
One guy here locally was made to remove his newly installed tank, because he never read the Resource Consent that came with the permit for the septic installation.

So what exactly was wrong with the installation?



[This message has been edited by pauluk (edited 10-16-2005).]

#144122 10/16/05 06:41 AM
Joined: Jul 2002
Posts: 8,443
Likes: 3
Trumpy Offline OP
Member
Paul,
Quote
So what exactly was wrong with the installation?
Septic tanks here, if they are newly installed, have to have a 5 chamber system with a re-circulating agitator in the middle.
The older system used a 1200 litre 2 chamber system, the newer one is 2400 litre and with a re-circ agitator and an outflow pump.
Mind you, you guys don't like litres, so I've posted it in that.
Get with it!!. [Linked Image]

#144123 10/16/05 08:19 AM
Joined: Mar 2005
Posts: 1,803
Member
I think there may be some confusion here. What exactly is a septic tank?
A concrete or plastic tank receives wastes and household, ( but not rain), water. It is sized and dimensioned, (volume & length /width/height ratios) to create non-turbulent conditions, such that solid wastes sink to the bottom, & of sufficient volume that a practically clear effluent gently emerges. Weirs are placed at the outfall so that floating debris cannot pass over, and in fact a leather-like layer forms on the surface which acts as a seal against smell. The tank is usually high-level vented. The action in the septic tank is by anaerobic bacteria; these digest a % of the solids in the absence of oxygen, creating methane as a by-product. While in 'septic' conditions, ( ie.denied oxygen ), the sewage remains relatively inoffensive. The effluent, while clear, is still very active and must be subjected to further treatment to reduce its biological oxygen demand ( BOD ). Treatment using aerobic bacteria is required, and these require abundent oxygen to do their job. There are many ways to achieve oxygenation;
* By draining the effluent away through a suitable area of the soil, via perforated pipes. The countless millions of naturally occurring soil bacteria render the effluent harmless. On heavy clay or where shallow aquifers exist close to the surface, or on fissured chalk/limestone/ or where over-porous sandy soils pertain, the solution is sealed quartz sand or other artificial media (coke breeze, zeolite, pozzellani etc.) filters arranged to do the same function.
* By agitation, entraining air into the mix, either with paddles or by air-injection. Aerobes attach themseves to debris in the effluent and circulate constantly. The problem with this, the so called activated sludge method, is the vast amount of solids produced, (ie the bodies of all the bugs); far more than the original solids before settlement, leading to frequent and expensive emptyings.
* The fixed media method, of which several types exist. In the most used type clarified waste effluent is treated by rotating discs, usually of polypropylene, which dip into the liquor. The bacteria live on the discs, and are constantly exposed to fresh liquor and oxygen. This method is called a Bio-disc, ( TRADE NAME).
Solids produced are less, and as the liquor is transmitted across banks of discs by wipers into separate compartments, produces very clean water at outfall.
All systems require periodic emptying, every 3-6 months for activated sludge, 1 year for fixed media, 4 years plain septic settlement.
This 'sludge' consists principally of Glucose, Fats and oils, vegetable fibre and inert earthy solids.

Now, whether you live in the middle of LA or the middle of nowhere, the basic method is the same- settle solids-aerobic treatment-release. While a city-system is fine, the simple home-plant has advantages for us country dwellers. First it can be built to operate soley on gravity, no electical power, and we can use standard WCs and fitments. Or, home-size Bio-disc /activated sludge tanks are avaiable where soil-type or small garden size dictates, and these typically consume perhaps 100W, with the advantage that exit water can be put into a watercourse or ditch. And, when excessive rain falls and a city system can't cope with the flow- they put raw sewage into the river system as a matter of policy. A home based system rarely if ever floods your yard.
Oh, and Mike, you say you wouldn't drink the water out of a treatment system. Mate, you already do. In London, they reckon the water has been through 6 people before it comes out of the faucets! Of course it gets further treatment- storage/ filtration/ chlorination.

Sorry if all this is boring, but it's my pet subject just now.

Alan

[This message has been edited by Alan Belson (edited 10-16-2005).]


Wood work but can't!
#144124 10/16/05 01:03 PM
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 145
C
Member
Trumpy, I think that requiring people to retrofit RCDs or GFCIs (depending where you live) to existing circuits would be a bureacratic nightmare, however as a matter of policy, if working on a consumer unit [switch board in your neck of the woods I believe?] I will generally fit one, they're cheap, a lot cheaper than a new life.

Quote
Sorry if all this is boring, but it's my pet subject just now.
Alan, not boring at all, one of the few places on the net you can have a sensible discussion about excrement <grin>.

People here in the UK tend to take city sewers for granted, and dump anything and everything down them, upto and including rubble, hazardous chemicals etc.

#144125 10/17/05 07:40 AM
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Posts: 7,520
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Quote
I think that requiring people to retrofit RCDs or GFCIs (depending where you live) to existing circuits would be a bureacratic nightmare,

As far as the U.K. is concerned, Tony's already burdening us with more than enough extra bureaucracy as it is, so we certainly don't need any more!

Besides, such a retrofit requirement would require absolutely draconian powers to enforce it. There are no official records of what electrical gear is present in houses.

The only way it could be enforced is to give some jumped-up local government bureaucrat powers to demand entry to inspect your wiring, or to require everybody to produce some sort of inspection certificate by a certain date.

We're becoming a police-state quite quickly enough already, without going down that road.

Quote
People here in the UK tend to take city sewers for granted, and dump anything and everything down them, upto and including rubble, hazardous chemicals etc.

Yep. It's not uncommon to hear pleas such as "Please do not dump old engine oil into the sewers."

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