<geo....@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:0e02eeeb-6458-4978...@e10g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
K,
I agree with Glen. Water is not going to leak around the pipe. Fill
it with hydraulic cement and/or an expandable rubber plug. You can get
more opinions on these sites if it will help. www.concretenetwork.com
www.nawsrc.org hgty.com/pro/foundation
Good luck, jim www.expertbasementrepair.com
I think your two choices if you *must* remove it are:
1. Break up the pipe (long pointy object... <g>)
or
2. Solvent. (Caution, fire hazard if you are not careful.)
Personally I'd leave it, stick inj a cap to cover the end and don't
worry about it.
I'm always reluctant to delete a feature. I always left old, unused things
in when I was a programmer, and now I do it in remodeling. That pipe might
be just what you need a few years from now. Or it might be what the next
owner of the house needs.
Fill it up with trinkets, seal it, and open it back up in ten years. You
can have your own time capsule.
--
Steve B.
New Life Home Improvement
Plug with an expanding rubber plug. If you're set on removing the pipe, slit
it using a reciprocating saw.