Probably not going to like any answers, but...

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I have a small domestic, one-house sewage pumping station. On the whole it's been fine for 30 years (on our second pump so not too bad). I have a problem with a float switch that has alerted me to another problem, the pressing one...

I have a concrete, 2 piece, 2 cu m chamber for all the water and poop to run in to, before being pumped out to the main sewer. The join is leaking, and a good stream of ground water is adding significantly to the water level, and it follows, the pumping frequency and energy costs.

Can I fix it from inside the chamber? I am not so squeamish I won't empty it and go inside. If there is a fix. Is there any goop that will do the job?

Or will I have to dig down to the join and fix from outside. I can see that the ground water pressure will help if I do the latter. BTW, only one side of the join is leaking oso the dig won't be all around the chamber.

Any ideas, products, fixes happily considered. Ta.
 
I have a small domestic, one-house sewage pumping station. On the whole it's been fine for 30 years (on our second pump so not too bad). I have a problem with a float switch that has alerted me to another problem, the pressing one...

I have a concrete, 2 piece, 2 cu m chamber for all the water and poop to run in to, before being pumped out to the main sewer. The join is leaking, and a good stream of ground water is adding significantly to the water level, and it follows, the pumping frequency and energy costs.

Can I fix it from inside the chamber? I am not so squeamish I won't empty it and go inside. If there is a fix. Is there any goop that will do the job?

Or will I have to dig down to the join and fix from outside. I can see that the ground water pressure will help if I do the latter. BTW, only one side of the join is leaking oso the dig won't be all around the chamber.

Any ideas, products, fixes happily considered. Ta.
All builders reading this have just run a mile.
 
All builders reading this have just run a mile.
The 'doing' if it gets done will be all mine, for better or worse. So the builders are off the hook in the blame game.

One idea of mine was to drain down (shut off the water and flush every bog*; and clean the area before putting a 5"wide bit of plastic, oozing with CT1 on the seam, and propping it side to side till the goop goes off. Thoughts?

*Herself WILL flush on me otherwise lol
 
The 'doing' if it gets done will be all mine, for better or worse. So the builders are off the hook in the blame game.

One idea of mine was to drain down (shut off the water and flush every bog*; and clean the area before putting a 5"wide bit of plastic, oozing with CT1 on the seam, and propping it side to side till the goop goes off. Thoughts?

*Herself WILL flush on me otherwise lol
I'm not sure plastic and CT1 is industrial enough or man enough for that job. We have had limited success with hydraulic mortar/concrete/sharp sand mixes and old fashioned manholes, but different scale.
 

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