Planes, Drains and Automobiles - Manchester - Nov 08

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ThenewMendoza

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A concrete monster that acts as the surface water run-off for Manchester airport's runways and the M56 motorway. This was my first drain in a while having been put off by poor weather conditions, life in general and a host of other trivialities, it felt good to be climbing down a manhole accessed ladder again.

PDAs2.jpg

Romanian1 first pointed me in the direction of this a few months ago and one evening a while back the two of us headed in, sadly, on that occasion, neither of us could actually be arsed taking pictures of what is essentially Bunker without the interesting bits.

But I wasn't gonna give up on it. So SparkUK and I had another crack more recently, determined to see more of this underground mistress of mither. RCP is DULL. Straight as a die RCP is DULL.

PDAs3.jpg

But we went on, maybe a mile or more, the flow of water was but a few inches, at least on the way upstream it was a few inches. This drain is puncuated along the way by vertical downpipes, of unknown origin or influx, some of them steadily drip away as if a gentle shower above is feeding them, others are starkly silent and dry.

PDAs4.jpg


One of them, however, constantly dribbles over the edge of a sump, nothing too serious or worrysome, until it REALLY lets go. And that's what it did. In spectacular fashion. Spark and I had been upstream casually making smalltalk about the chance of being attacked by velociraptors or giant man eating mushrooms, barely paying attention to the noise of rushing water as we headed downstream.

PDAs1.jpg


The first sight of an overflowing sump is scary, water was pouring into the drain at an astonishing rate, the problem with this drain however, is the fact that the nearest manhole will land you airside at Manchester Airport, you have a choice, be drowned or be shot. We chose drowning as the death of choice.

PDAs5.jpg

What took us 40 or 50 minutes to traverse upstream took us 20 to get down, all the while we expected a tsunami of water to wash us away, fortunately it didn't happen, and we were able to get to the outfall and underneath a flow check concrete barrier barely 40inches deep with rising water before making our escape.

I've never had a close call like that before, but it certainly serves as a reminder that drains are not to be ****** about with.

M :)
 
awesome report mate, fantastic job of lighting too!
 
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Nice drain mate. The lighting in that side pipe in photo 2 is cool. Love the mushrooms!
 
Nice,When we were in Bunker Drain there we heard a sudden influx of water stopped looked at each other said the usual did you hear that, started moving again, 10 seconds later heard the noise again, then we noticed the excess water was caused by us stopping (us thus causing a dam) and then starting whit the dammed water later making a lot of noise at the step in the upcoming junction, we had initially stopped to look at the dates on the pipes before the first ‘influx’. Glad ours was just a false alarm, and glad to hear you got out ok.

you may not have got as many pictures as planned but the ones you have got are mint, nice one.
 
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Class man. Exploding sump sounds scary. Does it have a name? You should call it sumpthing :p
 
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