Why Do You Need Sewer Repair? Let’s Take A Look.

It seems we’re asking a lot of our sewer drains these days. Across the country, wastewater and sewer districts are mounting public awareness campaigns designed to educate the public about what not to flush. The impetus, apparently, is a surge in blocked pipes. What is Clogging Our Pipes? In 2011, Maine’s Portland Water District analyzed…

Stop Digging: Pipe Relining Without the Hassle

What are the most hated words in a driver’s vocabulary? “Men At Work”. It means trenches, holes in the ground, massive backups and delays in their commutes. It means pavement torn up and weeks of repaving ahead, all to fix a problem they didn’t even know was there. There’s a better way. Don’t dig up…

No Dig Pipe Repair: Cured in Place Pipe Lining Prevents Landscapes from Being Ruined

No dig pipe repair (or cured in place pipe lining) has become our specialty here at Dynamic Drain Technologies. And because we’re one of the earliest adopters of this technology, we’ve seen how much money it’s saved people over the years. It’s also saved numerous landscapes from ruination and creating extreme expense. Call it the angioplasty of…

No Dig Pipe Repair: Cured in Place Pipe Lining Prevents Landscapes from Being Ruined

No dig pipe repair (or cured in place pipe lining) has become our specialty here at Dynamic Drain Technologies. And because we’re one of the earliest adopters of this technology, we’ve seen how much money it’s saved people over the years. It’s also saved numerous landscapes from ruination and creating extreme expense. Call it the angioplasty of…

Cured-In-Place Pipe Prevents Broken Pipes From Becoming A Disaster

A broken pipe isn’t good, of course, but thanks to a repair method known as cured in place pipe, it may not have to be a disaster. The easiest way to think of cured-in-place pipe (or CIPP) is that it is a pipe within a pipe. It was first successfully implemented in London in 1971. Since…

Does Your Facility Have Orangeburg Pipe? You Might Need Sewer Repair

Named after the upstate New York city in which it was invented, Orangeburg pipe is made from compressed tar paper or a blend of pitch and wood fiber. It was invented in the 1860s, but really took off in popularity in the middle part of last century. Are you familiar with Orangeburg pipe? That is…