iNow Posted Thursday at 08:59 PM Posted Thursday at 08:59 PM 4 hours ago, Genady said: I'd like to narrow it down as much as possible. Grab a soil moisture probe and start poking around in a grid pattern. Record measurements taken within each cell of your grid and see where it’s wettest https://www.bestbuypick.com/elite/best-5-soil-moisture-meters-of-2024-2/ Do it every foot or 2 for more granular precise measures https://www.bobvila.com/articles/best-soil-moisture-meter/
Genady Posted Thursday at 10:35 PM Author Posted Thursday at 10:35 PM 1 hour ago, iNow said: Grab a soil moisture probe and start poking around in a grid pattern. Record measurements taken within each cell of your grid and see where it’s wettest https://www.bestbuypick.com/elite/best-5-soil-moisture-meters-of-2024-2/ Do it every foot or 2 for more granular precise measures https://www.bobvila.com/articles/best-soil-moisture-meter/ Thank you. The issue is, if I understand correctly, that they are designed to measure moisture in a gardening soil, although one of the meters mentions wood and drywall. My "ground" is not a soil. It is a mix of coarse sand, rocks, and gravel. Add mostly arid climate (except in rainy season, when everything is soaking wet). I doubt there is any moisture above the leak.
iNow Posted yesterday at 01:43 AM Posted yesterday at 01:43 AM (edited) Fair. I’m no expert on moisture meters, but I bet there’s a tool or process beyond divining rods to figure out which areas around the drain line are wettest relative to the surrounding vicinity. With that knowledge in hand, you could then focus your dig on a smaller section of yard. Otherwise, just redo the whole line and move on with your life. Edited yesterday at 02:12 AM by iNow
swansont Posted yesterday at 02:08 AM Posted yesterday at 02:08 AM If there’s a leak in the filtration system, isolating it would allow one to measure the pool level change and see if it reverted to the evaporation value, rather than probing the ground.
Genady Posted yesterday at 02:29 AM Author Posted yesterday at 02:29 AM 41 minutes ago, iNow said: focus your dig on a smaller section of yard Yep, this is the goal. 42 minutes ago, iNow said: redo the whole line and move on with your life Sure, but it's not time to give up yet. 18 minutes ago, swansont said: If there’s a leak in the filtration system, isolating it would allow one to measure the pool level change and see if it reverted to the evaporation value, rather than probing the ground. I'll do this next. Thanks.
Genady Posted 6 hours ago Author Posted 6 hours ago 17 hours ago, Genady said: 17 hours ago, swansont said: If there’s a leak in the filtration system, isolating it would allow one to measure the pool level change and see if it reverted to the evaporation value, rather than probing the ground. I'll do this next I did. Shut off all the valves to and from the motor-filter assembly. No effect. Evidently, the leak is in the underground pipes. 18 hours ago, iNow said: I bet there’s a tool or process beyond divining rods to figure out which areas around the drain line are wettest relative to the surrounding vicinity. I got an unconventional idea for such a thing. Will try tomorrow.
iNow Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 1 hour ago, Genady said: I got an unconventional idea for such a thing. Will try tomorrow. Unroll a package or two of paper towels across the lawn and walk across them? See where the water soaked in most? Curious to hear your report.
Genady Posted 4 hours ago Author Posted 4 hours ago (edited) 31 minutes ago, iNow said: Unroll a package or two of paper towels across the lawn and walk across them? See where the water soaked in most? Curious to hear your report. Below is the close-up picture of the surface texture of my "lawn". If it did not rain recently, all is dry. Here is another: Edited 4 hours ago by Genady
TheVat Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago How easy is it to push a garden stake into the ground there? If it penetrates far enough, then pull it out and see if the tip is damp.
Genady Posted 3 hours ago Author Posted 3 hours ago 2 minutes ago, TheVat said: How easy is it to push a garden stake into the ground there? To push - impossible. Only by hitting with a good hammer. A wooden stake will break. It's a mix of rocks of various sizes. To clarify. These rocks and gravel are not a cover of the ground. They ARE the ground. At least to the depth of ~40cm.
iNow Posted 59 minutes ago Posted 59 minutes ago 2 hours ago, Genady said: At least to the depth of ~40cm. Sorry, how warm is that in Fahrenheit though? /rimshot
Genady Posted 12 minutes ago Author Posted 12 minutes ago 45 minutes ago, iNow said: Sorry, how warm is that in Fahrenheit though? /rimshot 😉
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now