Line identification

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Tanis143

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I'm just going off how deeply I've seen cable buried. The AT$T cable that feeds my house isn't more than 6" deep (as the jackwagon building the access road next door REPEATEDLY proved), and the last time I talked to Cox they told me it would be $1200 to run cable to my house, so I have no idea how deep they run their cable.

Only $1200? Man, that's cheap. I've seen some customer's pay some pretty large bills to get cable to their homes. But, when all that was available was Valor/Windstream, can't say I blame them.
 

SoonerP226

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Only $1200? Man, that's cheap. I've seen some customer's pay some pretty large bills to get cable to their homes. But, when all that was available was Valor/Windstream, can't say I blame them.
That was 20-25 years ago, so that was just for cable tv. I've never seen any programming that was worth that much.
 

JeffT

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No, nothing in the back or the neighbors back. That is what I was initially thinking was some sort of irrigation thing until I saw the middle line encased. We have a septic that feeds to sprinklers, but those are on the opposite sides. I was thinking maybe it was an overfill line from the septic, but still wouldn’t explain what that middle thing is. I almost want to cut it to see.... but I’m just gonna seal it and wonder instead lol

If you have an aerobic septic tank, that feeds sprinklers, do you have a well? It might be a power line for the submerged well pump??


Live Simply, Love Generously, Care Deeply, Speak Kindly, Shoot Well, Leave the rest to God.
 

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