I wasn’t expecting to see this! Thank you for making this, and thank you for the kind words. I have a couple questions. All of my big pipes are 4”. Does that make any difference for venting? All the drain lines are 2”. I was planning on installing primers to help prevent the P-traps from drying out. Do you think backflow preventers are necessary to add as well? I can still add in vents, so if I have the drain line pipes apart, would it make sense to add them? Other than primers, vents, doing a water test, and possibly the back flow preventers, is there anything else that we should fix or add before the concrete is poured?
@15digitlongname4 ай бұрын
like and replying to bump higher 😬
@ZylonFPV4 ай бұрын
Good to see a “how can we improve this” attitude!
@kencramer16974 ай бұрын
I would love to see Roger take a trip up to Iowa to do an "inspection". I think he would be impressed with the under slab drainage for the new extension. Roger would know much better than I, But I believe a back flow preventer is for where you tie into city sewer or into your septic. Though I can see a use for them on floor drains. Your septic will have to be down the hill a ways if you are going to have any plumbing under the new extension since it will have to be lower than that new basement.
@RogerWakefield4 ай бұрын
I'd love to take trips around the country and "inspect" peoples work! Sounds like fun!
@ZylonFPV4 ай бұрын
@@RogerWakefield what about his questions? He was asking for your advice 🙂
@matthewmcmurtry834 ай бұрын
Dont worry that footer that they are chipping away at is huge and overkill. They dug it out and poured it themselves because the house didn't even have a footer originally.
@rich407014 ай бұрын
Wow Roger I am impressed. I have been watching Cole’s videos for years now and never seen him respond to a comment or question. You make a video about his plumbing and BOOM Cole asked for your advice. You’re the man.
@jamesberry6574 ай бұрын
in coles eyes were all lower than him he doesnt chat with us commeners
@NesMee-gz1rg4 ай бұрын
@@jamesberry657 you're making a very negative assumption there. He is busy farming, renovating and being with his family.
@greghamann20994 ай бұрын
@@jamesberry657 In the six years I have been watching Cole he never comments really. He is not the only one that does that.
@lisamyers84074 ай бұрын
Just a bit of background on Cole and Roman. Cole is an Iowa farmer of 2000+ acres with his Family of Corn and Soybean. He went to college and studied finance and accounting in order to help his family run and operate their farm for efficiently. He is quite the stickler in making sure projects are done in a sensical, efficient and cost effective manner. Has he made mistakes, yes he has and he has shown his YT subs time and time again how amazing he is at learning from those mistakes and setting things right. Roman is an immigrant from Ukraine and is a college trained Engineer he is also a World Arm Wrestling Champion for his weight class. He is Cole’ and the Cornstar Families right hand man (along with Zach) in almost everything done on the farm and the house renovation how. They both are truly the dynamic duo. LOL.. Anyways, I believe from that video there was a Friend of Cole’ that is a master Plummer that was to come and inspect their work, I believe that was in the video following the one you reviewed and he gave them a thumbs up and did make suggestions which Cole said they could adjust before pouring the floor. Great video!
@JohnathanBruner-t2d4 ай бұрын
Cole Langenbau has another side hustle that failed to get mentioned. Cole digs graves. The grave business is a big income.
@M1chaelCostello4 ай бұрын
I’ve watched Roger Wakefield’s and Cole the Cornstar’s KZbin channels. I enjoy both channels and love the crossover video. I’m a high school English teacher, and I love how Roger explains plumbing concepts in everyday language. He’s a master teacher.
@LostTouristGanesha924 ай бұрын
the crossover we didn't expect
@dlodge49664 ай бұрын
Cole is a hard working God loving family man and he is a joy! We thank you for any help you give him!
@fairhall0014 ай бұрын
When I heard that Cole had watched a few KZbin's on plumbing I immediately thought of this channel. Awesome to see your reaction to Coles work and that you thought he did a good job.
@DouglasFergen-pq9ru4 ай бұрын
I have been following this Cole the Cornstar for about 3 years! He is a go getter!
@evan-edstrom4 ай бұрын
Hi Roger, I'm not a plumber but I did a project about this extensive a few years ago thanks to people like you on KZbin. Ours was pressure tested and inspected, passed first try thank goodness! Now you've got me wishing I'd made a video of my own.
@RogerWakefield4 ай бұрын
@@evan-edstrom you should have…
@jamesgarrett8394 ай бұрын
Your a great guy who really wants to help DIYers, Glad to see you had different ideas on some parts of installation but you didn't come off as condesending. thats why I watch your channel
@RogerWakefield4 ай бұрын
@@jamesgarrett839 he really spent a lot of time trying to do everything right. I like the way he works.
@henryt92544 ай бұрын
Fully agree in trying to get all the major plumbing on the ground which potentially has a problem down the road if the ground ever shifts. Since this house does not have a crawlspace, it is critical that the inground pipes are secured NOT with loose gravel or dirt. Plumbings underneath the house which is part of the foundation should be designed as one permanent solution. Digging onto the foundation to rectified a problem after the house was build on top of it would be a major undertaking.
@sarah-ken4 ай бұрын
Cole lives on a farm in Rural East Central Iowa. (That is as much detail as I going to say on public channel) . Rural Farm projects are rarely inspected by the AHJ. As there is really is no AHJ.. Cole has the resources if he chose to, to have private inspections and he has a circle of influence that I believe would speak up loudly if they saw something unsafe.. And yes it would be great content @Roger Wakefield to collaborate with him and do a site visit.
@STABtheCLAM4 ай бұрын
Same in Texas. If it's out of city limits, then all's fair in love and war and plumbing!
@satanicinduction4 ай бұрын
Its cool that this guy is so constructive about his criticism
@Heavens-Humanaterian-Army4 ай бұрын
Thank you for this feedback for cole and Roman there working so hard on the whole project.
@rhbofwcc4 ай бұрын
Glad to see they got your advice and plan to follow it before the concrete is poured. Good video even for us that will call a plumber now. Thanks for sharing.
@seraphx264 ай бұрын
As a DIY guy who has had a lot of success with my home, you've got to get that plumbing vented, it's just foundational to keeping your system in good order.
@mrcryptozoic8174 ай бұрын
Adding the locater wire is brilliant. Wish i had done that in 1991 when i put in my sprinkler system.
@jacobsonnier72592 ай бұрын
Great job for someone who's never done plumbing. My main critique would be the 2 90's that were used under the slab. You can use long sweeps if you need to use a 90, but typically we use 2 45s to avoid clogging and easier access for your line if your snaking the building drain. I definitely agree with Roger about the trap primers and vents. Kudos padnuh
@JustinHarcrow4 ай бұрын
I re-plumbed my basement. Unfortunately meant concrete cutting and digging in about 4" minus rock and boulders to get a waste pump in. Our septic tank failed that was buried 10' below grade and had to re-locate the new tank. Of course that meant lifting the basement plumbing to the new outlet. Did it all myself but I've done some plumbing design through the years and did a lot of learning before getting going. The worst part was cutting the slab with only 1' of room between existing walls and the furnace. Then the old cast iron had to be capped off and some of it broken out to make room for new PVC. It was a lot of hands and knees work for a guy with a replaced knee. So far... so good! The only to-do yet is to route the condensate drain to a new floor drain that was put in and remove the condensate pump, and I think I may add another circuit to the breaker panel that is separate from the pump circuit that has an alarm panel on it. I'm not sure why but the 20A outlet tripped once already and the pump is the only thing on that circuit. (Liberty 4/10 pump). I do need to replace that outlet as it was used during the concrete cutting and tripped a few times with that electric concrete saw.
@MSeroga4 ай бұрын
Love to see this! Young men working hard with their body and their brain and not crying about how hard life is or how easy someone else may have it. Also love seeing a person be wise enough to take advice from experienced people who clearly know more, humble, young, and hard working men, love to see it!
@axe8354 ай бұрын
The young man is a 5th generation farmer in Iowa. You should have seen the work he has done in the last 5 years to the property. His Great ,Great Grandfather bought it ,it was only 15 acres, and it has grown into a 2000 acre farm that his Dad, brother, and himself work. He has a channel on KZbin Cole the Cornstar. And his Dad now has his own called Daddy Cornstar.
@shagofdeath714 ай бұрын
Love watching both of you guys channels.. Cornstar renovation and how he is educating us on farming is amazing.
@tamarawyrick65694 ай бұрын
Absolutely love Cole the Cornstar and his channel! Thanks for helping him.
@Lou58Lou4 ай бұрын
I am not a plumber, but we also did our own re-plumb (we took out the cast iron system and replaced it with PVC). The only thing I thought Cole did wrong were the cleanouts; he should have done a "Y" cleanout instead of a "T". The reason this would be better is the place where it would most likely get clogged would be below the cleanout (tree roots the biggest culprit). Also when our sump pump failed during a large rain storm I was able to unscrew the plug and bucket brigade the water to the cleanout and remove the water. We had a few issues when our street had a combined sewer, so we plugged every drain hole with concrete to prevent sewage in our basement (we did leave one open, but plugged it with an expanding rubber plug). The only water in the basement was from the humidifier which we ran a pump to take that drain water up to the above ground plumbing. The washer and dryer are on the first floor. I was also the one elected to stand in the poop water to connect the clay pipe (coming in from the street, I rented a chain cutter to make sure the pipe had a nice clean edge) then I purchase a rubber boot to go from PVC to clay and tightened down the screw clamps. The flooring guys were coming to pour a concrete floor, and my husband was at work.
@josephj65214 ай бұрын
For landscape drainage work, I’m confident. In fact I enjoy it. For sewerage work under a floor, I’d prefer to get a pro. You’re right. A test would be good before backfilling and getting it inspected would be a good idea.
@TheStickinator4 ай бұрын
I have a similar question about venting. Where they live is it IPC, UPC or no inspection at all. UPC they could be running horizontal underfloor venting over to a wall. IPC they could take advantage of coronation waste and vent oversizing the pipe from their floor drains for example. I agree they have done some nice work.
@zeddpilsner44 ай бұрын
11:58 just a tip when viewing youtube videos when they are paused, you can advance frame by frame using the < and > keys for more precision
@judytruesdell68164 ай бұрын
Thank you. Old great grandma here
@garycasper29294 ай бұрын
Dudes got an incredibly great attitude.. 👍
@CD-vb9fi4 ай бұрын
I would too for 7k to own that!
@billnict14 ай бұрын
@@CD-vb9fi $7K is what his great great grandfather paid for it way back when, Cole inherited it when his grandfather passed away...
@CD-vb9fi4 ай бұрын
@@billnict1 Ah, okay, I was thinking the grandchild paid 7k for it.
@mattkelly49454 ай бұрын
Extending wet venting to the max 😂😂
@laurasell23534 ай бұрын
Hi Roger! Thank you for this video critique. I'm a Cole the Cornstar follower and a DIYer. I was wondering what a pro would say about his research and work. I also found your video about pipe hammering and fixing it with a hammer arrestor. My plumber will be installing one for our home soon. I used to work as facility mgr at a building where hammering happened in the restroom after the flush pressure in the commodes was adjusted. Wish I had found you before I left that job. Glad to subscribe to your channel!
@Conservativetruckeraz4 ай бұрын
He's based in Iowa I do believe in another video he said he had a neighbor who is a plumber inspect the work and say it was good. Been an interesting series so far watching him work on this house.
@RogerWakefield4 ай бұрын
Great to know! This was a fun episode to watch
@Romegrom4 ай бұрын
@@RogerWakefield Thank you for taking time to watch and encouraging comments! We will definitely address your concerns sir 😊
@Lawlesshomeimprovement4 ай бұрын
@@Romegromgreat job bud
@RogerWakefield4 ай бұрын
Y'all are doing great work!
@PromasterHOF4 ай бұрын
In a later video he said the code inspector approved the plumbing work, I don’t know how they did that without doing a pressurization leak test but hey whatever works is good for them
@hatredcopter838_3 ай бұрын
A little surprised you didn't say anything about his double 45s right after he talked about the boilers and 1st floor bathroom tieing in at around the 545 mark. Lol that got me soooooo stoked when I seen that! 🤟
@rdudeb50584 ай бұрын
I would add back water valve on the branch line with a clean out down stream for service. Dont want to flood the basement if theres a stopage. But thats just me. All good other then lack of vents. Good job and clean work.
@john2willis704 ай бұрын
He overkilled on the drainage system. Has floor drains to the outside and he has a sump pump pit. He said in another video that he will be waterproofing the outside walls on the inside by putting up dimple board behind the drywall as a weeping system. I doubt there will be a need for anything else. That basement will be dry even in a monsoon rain.
@billnict14 ай бұрын
@@john2willis70 - From watching his videos, I'm not even sure he's planning on putting a pump in that sump. He ran the drain tile out the back of the house into more drain tile that he has buried under that deep hole where his underground home movie theatre is going to go. He then sloped it out to the north down to the creek appx. 100 yds away.
@brad8854 ай бұрын
I did my own plumbing-really simple, 1st and 2nd bathrooms stacked, kitchen sink in line with stack. No bathroom sink vent but bathroom sink vents into the main 3" going upstairs (vent+toilet line). One thing I will say, is the more cleanouts/snake spots you can include, the better. I also had maybe a 3/4"/ft pitch but that was mostly because of where the lines came in and where they had to hit to vent for the septic.
@kenreynolds10004 ай бұрын
Dry P traps! Our 1960s church building gets this all the time with the congregation being responsible for cleaning. They dump the mop water into the mop sink and not the bathroom drains. seems it happens every few years and everyone freaks out until someone reminds everyone about the dry p-trap.
@donaldblank88734 ай бұрын
This is exactly what a third year apprentice job would look like. A big learning lesson.
@challengerhitchman4 ай бұрын
Welcome to the rural midwest of plumbing without inspections. I have had to learn alot about proper venting.
@nes99922 күн бұрын
Right? My garage is tube and knob. Meh, still works. The Midwest is just as if Florida, Texas, and Canada had a love child.
@monicasojka27384 ай бұрын
Thanks for your feedback. I have done bathroom remodeling and refinished kitchen cabinets and new counters. My husband did the plumbing and electrical work. We also built a 16 by 16 deck 9 feet high.
@InHisImage1161Ай бұрын
Q Why is the floor drain connected to the other plumbing at all ? Wouldn't you connect to a perimeter drain or run a separate, independent run to an outlet? Seems a sewage backup could send a mess back into your basement, and you don't need to be concerned with gasses or traps.
@erikbrantner4295Ай бұрын
Compromising the foundation isn't a good option when you have other options that are easier/ better like using a 45° and then continue upward at that one point of this project!
@simoneconsciousobserver31054 ай бұрын
Cole is very motivated. I watched when he first got the house. I think he was 20yr. I call it KZbin University. It was a great day when I learned how to repair my portable ac
@billjones45654 ай бұрын
Glad you're checking this out. I've been following this project and I've been wondering about venting on some of this. Also there's a sink in that corner room where the drain runs towards the wall and then makes a 180 back intto the main line. Don't get me wrong, Those guys are busting their asses. I'm sure they'll have to get an inspection so I hope they get things squared away before concrete goes down.
@rohwynn4 ай бұрын
This is a plot twist I wasn't expecting. I've been following Coles progress since January. He's not afraid to get his hands dirty.
@bobbyfisher63434 ай бұрын
I have watched Cole the Cornstar for years, he is one hard working young man, His helper Roman is awesome and fits well with Cole
@davidturney29754 ай бұрын
I like that he's putting it so many floor drains
@thorn05814 ай бұрын
They haven’t done rough ins for plumbing or electrical on the top three floors and are still working out the HVAC and in floor heating system. Cole is still planning to pour a concrete floor once everything is ready but they going to change structure by adding steel I-beams to transfer the load and remove some support posts.
@oldtimefarmboy6174 ай бұрын
I looked up that floor drain. It has a plug inside the drain bowel where the clean-out connects to the bowl so sewer gasses can not escape out of the floor drain.
@tristanj73124 ай бұрын
Never expected to see a Cole the Cornstar duo on here 🤣
@StormWaterDrainageSolutions4 ай бұрын
Very good work, I just hope he used non woven geo textile filter fabric for that footer drain. I couldn’t tell if it was just landscape fabric or not but if it was landscape fabric then it’s not going to allow water to pass through.
@john2willis704 ай бұрын
In one of Cole's videos he does a demonstration on the fabric he used around the pipes. He showed how the water goes through the fabric but sand couldn't. It was a video where they were running drain lines out to the ditch from the house.
@john2willis704 ай бұрын
Cole is a smart kid. He does demonstrations in most of his videos to explain to us what his thinking process is. I liked his demonstration on his footer project. The house has no footers and one part of the wall has just dirt and no concrete. He and Roman dug underneath the wall in sections and poured footers around the whole basement. They are now working to dig out the dirt wall and turn it into a concrete wall with a footer.
@t-yoonit25 күн бұрын
Even if he didn't do a perfect professional job, shout-out to that kid for having incredible ambition to save this family heirloom himself, a labor of love. He can take great pride in saying he built this himself.
@BrendaMcHugh4 ай бұрын
Do your trunk line first so you can establish your 2% grade then you can cut your branches that way pipes don’t like a snake. Plumbers use the 1.414 and the 2.617 method for your offsets
@coreyfranco70604 ай бұрын
Yea ok
@Rambleon4444 ай бұрын
Around 5 mins into the video, I would have had an approved detailed drawn-out plan.
@juniorquinata19384 ай бұрын
I been watching cole videos and was interested in his abilities you had me guessing at first when I heard you say that's not how you would do it a couple of times then threw me for a loop at the end when you approved, to be honest if I needed plumbing work I'd hire you just for your honesty and lack of ego, you're a good man
@RPower-be6wz4 ай бұрын
I assume that there won't be any steel in the slab, otherwise tracer wire is going to be hard to pick up...unless they're using insulated wire and have a locator rather than just a metal detector. Good idea though.
@sheltdog84634 ай бұрын
I give him one thing, he knows the difference between a y and a tee! This year alone if opened up a floor and seen tee’s laying on their side catching drain lines!
@yhwhtlc92174 ай бұрын
Roger, $7000 back then is $247,592.36 today... Even though we today think $7000 for that huge house is cheap, it includes the farm land that came with it as well. The ppl who owned the house ended up in auction and Coles G/Grandfather bought it for $7000, and tried to sell it back to that same family for that amount which of course they couldn't.....so his family moved into that house and combined the 2 farms.....
@josephclark71634 ай бұрын
You should watch more of their renovation. They are doing great!.
@dustyvanbrocklin47314 ай бұрын
Here in rural central Illinois the only permit or inspection required is you are putting in a septic tank. Otherwise it is fair game.
@JohnPace-n4t4 ай бұрын
Cole did say they plan on putting in a new septic system, and would need a permit from either state or county with the name of a licensed contractor who would do that job
@moto_story774 ай бұрын
Colethecornstar is the hardest workin guy you’ll ever see! Love his channel!
@MP-yh7jv4 ай бұрын
I would say it would be fine for them to do this themselves. Just consult with a licensed plumber beforehand. Pay for an hour or two. You will get way better information then you will find on the internet for your specific project. A few hundred dollars up front will save you thousands later when the stuff doesnt drain the way it should.
@45Deere95004 ай бұрын
There's no plumbing upstairs. They've built the interior walls, but have yet to install any plumbing, HVAC, or electrical in the walls. You'll have more chances to critique Cole the Cornstar. They'll be doing all the plumbing in the three stories above the basement, and in the addition they're adding on. No idea if there are inspectors where he lives, just East of Gladbrook, Iowa, in the country.
@jameswilliams-fr2tp4 ай бұрын
I learned you could recherche this up I've been cole video watcher for a while now thanks for some advice
@Elucidus44 ай бұрын
We are building a new bathroom into what is basically a bedroom sized bathroom that had only a small sink and a toilet, but luckily it had all of the plumbing leading to it, but I am building the walls, adding the plumbing to the rest of the room, including moving the toilet 14 feet. You may not think 1/4 inch per foot adds up, but when the plumbing is already in the floor, it does. Then we are adding a shower and a second sink where the toilet was. I think going into an already built room and tearing out only the parts you need to modify is harder than building stuff fresh. I did do a test of the drainage for the shower to make sure it didn't leak, because if it did I would have to go back into the tiled floor to fix it.
@TheStrat704 ай бұрын
I said the same as you about the vents on the traps I noticed the primers didn't mention it to him though. I am not familiar with this type of trap either was thinking perhaps it is some sort of cheater vent as we call them up here in Canada. Glad you did this video. BTW I never heard back from him.
@kennethbolton9514 ай бұрын
As far as the digging being easier, the whole basement had to have concrete jack hammered and they encounted boulders and large rocks and three different types of soil, it was even necessary to rent some type of machine to skid lift slabs. It was monumental for two guys plus they had to carry chunks upstairs before they put access ramp and hole where two basement windows were.
@thomasquinn405Ай бұрын
Bravo very well done for this much plumbing
@mkzenthusiasts4 ай бұрын
He's doing a really good job I hope you follow everything he's done
@392_Chronicles4 ай бұрын
I was screaming internally when I saw no vents or trap primers but it comes with the territory that he doesn’t plumb but they sure did learn a lot from Roger’s video
@sheerziggy4 ай бұрын
Definitely need trap primers and some venting. But I did see a fitting out orientation and I would have felt better with a hydrostatic test before covering.
@TJK500144 ай бұрын
Yeah, in watching the full series, I don't remember any venting. Good point on having traps. Gonna get stinky if sewer (septic) gas comes back through the pipes.
@anytractorman4 ай бұрын
I put veg oil in the basement drain it seals the trap off
@BTW...4 ай бұрын
Gunna be a stinky shit fight if there is a blockage further down the line and so all the waste from toilet pans in the floors above starts discharging out of floor drains or hand basins. The basement, 2 metres below natural ground level, will become a poo pond.
@BTW...4 ай бұрын
@@anytractorman That won't stop pee and poo emerging with force when a blockage occurs further down the line.
@JohnnyRotten75Ай бұрын
All drainage pipe should typically see 4-6 inches of non ballast material over it, especially when you use pvc for drainage (very brittle )
@scotth50382 ай бұрын
Rydon mitigation system. used in crawlers and basements to minimize gas build up from perhaps old coal mines locally or your down hill from a old land fill that may have been turned into a golf course
@stevem10814 ай бұрын
The rates plumbers charge(along with electricians) many people are turning to DIY. I added a spigot on my house a few months ago, plumbers wanted 400.00. I bought pex a crimping tool, t fitting, piece of pipe and spigot all for 60.00 It took me less than an hour to install it. I saved 340.00 and now have the crimping tool for any other work I might need to do.
@CragifiedАй бұрын
I am not a professional plumber. So other then venting (having lived with a washer standpipe that didn't have a proper trap or vent I know how important it is) my one critique is it felt like that they were exceptional adverse to running T's and made way more arm length then needed, which is mostly a cost issue but overcomplicated their layout imho.
@raxorlp99322 ай бұрын
if u put some vegetable oil in the p trap it dry out much slower, we do this here with p traps that not used much
@quesocat420694 ай бұрын
I don't know how I got here, I have no plumbing coming up and I work in IT. however, I can help! when you want to advance or rewind a youtube video by individual frames, pause the video and then use the comma and period buttons to go back and forth to get that perfect frame to show :)
@JoeA19744 ай бұрын
Looks like a Sioux Chief FD that I used to use... there's an 1½" plug inside that bypasses the trap for a C/O and it had a backflow preventing ball that was installed at the top of the trap.
@JoeA19744 ай бұрын
I used to buy PVC versions of the same.
@needaman664 ай бұрын
Dunno about their inspections/codes, but there's still time to test. What worries me is they did foundations in approx 1 metre bits. All cold joined. Didnt see any bonding agent. 😬
@Rickey7034 ай бұрын
Maybe Roger would do a vid on gradient hydraulics. Combating the effects of gradient hydraulics is what we prevent with proper venting. Relieving positive and negative pressures in the system to protect trap seals.
@mattm26844 ай бұрын
On your shower branch and floor drain branch the length can only be 2x the diameter of the pipe to vent correctly. So if you are using 2 inch pipe you can branch 4ft without a vent
@tousi834 ай бұрын
Venting may bite him and agreed with not touching the foundation comments. Glad he used double 45s on the bottom of the stacks. 👍 Keep it up Roger.
@theyhateme87634 ай бұрын
thats a lot of 4 inch pipe,,those drains will self vent,, yes wet ventint out sife groups is agaist code,, but wasnt always// many inspectors if you give them a soild reason they will llet it slide.,typing one had eating a ht dog
@EvanDunville4 ай бұрын
They actually had to dig under the concrete walls and add footers it didn't have any since it was built like 100 years ago.
@billnict14 ай бұрын
@@EvanDunville - That was painful watching them do that hand excavating 2-3 feet at a time! It didn't seem to bother them though... About the venting, Cole still has to plumb the upper three floors so I fully expect he will run vents through the roof. They completely gutted the upstairs including the internal studs. They also sistered all the floor joists on all three stories so I believe it will get done correctly...
@karenchesser63484 ай бұрын
I agree about the back flow, and he did forget the air vents.
@VintageAnything4 ай бұрын
Roger i justed subscribed to you, i love watching cole but you just earned my subscription and I am loving youre other videos also, much love from ohio my friend ❤
@MiltJohnson-sw9lc29 күн бұрын
If no trap primer in basement, he can always put mineral oil in trap if not used , oil will not evaporate
@tylerfranke6194 ай бұрын
2 of some of my favorite channels come together lol
@mkzenthusiasts4 ай бұрын
You should see all the what are they discovered under the 16-ft basement they dig after this basement plumbing. And the entire house is gutted so there's no plumbing upstairs yet
@billnict14 ай бұрын
Yep, it's a dry hole now, they did a good job mitigating all that ground water...
@cheto29524 ай бұрын
I follow cole the corn star since he was 19 he does great videos. For years.
@jonflanagin66824 ай бұрын
They poured all the footers , because they didn't have any.
@gr8d4ne3 ай бұрын
Idk about you guys but in Wisconsin this system would fail inspection on lack of appropriate pipe size for cleanout alone
@BoomerElite4u9 күн бұрын
Im not even a plumber, but I dug up my entire yard (I spent days doing this) and replaced the piping and the plumbing has been better than when my parents bought this house 35 years ago. I remember the town being shocked when they showed up and I had already done everything because they were like yall going to have to hire a plumber, and get an excavator in here, and then they walked around and were like "oh, I see you've been digging."
@ShoehornBundy4 ай бұрын
I work for an HVAC company and don't do plumbing. We were in an attic working on the AC and the hot water heater was leaking into the pan. When we were up there changing the hot water heater, I kept saying I'm not a plumber.
@facelift3163 ай бұрын
Bro its Cole! Lit one of my top 10 fave youtubers of all time.
@deniseyost94134 ай бұрын
I really hope Cole sees this ❤.
@alexgarza74864 ай бұрын
I love call the CORN star in Roman, who is a very hard worker with him just watching your videos and learning how to do. Plumbing is a genius. It’s hard enough to figure out Plumbing, but watching a man you don’t even know do it and telling you how he has a lot of faith and trust in youwell anyways I wish that you could visit with him and give him some advice that would be great for him God’s blessings as always
@scottspann86244 ай бұрын
Yes but that end connection to the sump pump has a lot of back grade! 😂😂
@kriss19564 ай бұрын
I would love to see you meet up with Cole and Roman and inspect their work!
@danielriordan63874 ай бұрын
You know Roger someone brought up a point about you making a trip to Iowa to inspect his work. This would make a good informative video for you to create.
@RogerWakefield4 ай бұрын
Someone get in touch with Cole, this would be a fun video...
@Keith_Mikell4 ай бұрын
How cool would it be if you showed up at his house and helped him finish the job. That would make a freaking fantastic video. You could install all the stuff that you had mentioned like trap primer and other stuff even surprise him or make it like a surprise to the audience. It would be great if you went to corn stars $7 thousand dollar mansion. You should set it up man Collabs get you major reach.
@dlm4254 ай бұрын
Roger's not on tools anymore, he's a keyboard warrior now lol
@BTW...4 ай бұрын
Turn up and finish the job correctly, and issue a certificate of compliance for free? The DIY Cole has the resources to pay for a local professional to undertake that work. The professional would have done all that work solo or with an apprentice, in less than half the time and using half the fittings.
@kevinadams55924 ай бұрын
@@BTW...you sound like the kinda guy who leaves his cart in the middle of the parking lot
@lefty07414 ай бұрын
@@kevinadams5592 BTW sounds like a know-it-all that likes to piss in someone's cereal to ruin their day which makes him feel important.
@RogerWakefield4 ай бұрын
@@kevinadams5592 if I roll a cart out, I always return it back inside or wherever they store the carts. That’s a big deal to me…
@jessetaylor7849Ай бұрын
Trap primer or a trap guard been on a few projects now where they're getting rid of primers and just going to trap guards. What about the 12" of clean soil above the pipe that the code requires for backfill
@oldtimefarmboy6174 ай бұрын
I have a question. I am certain that the more vents you have the better it would be, but if the facilities upstairs have vents on the sewer pipes, do you need vents on the pipes after they run into the floor of the basement sewer pipes?