Be sure that a french drain is actually what you need. I see houses all the time where people have tons of stormwater entering their lot, house flooded, and some landscaper sold them a 4" frenchdrain to solve the problem when they really needed an 18" pipe and a couple of grate inlets. French drains are awesome at solving the problem they were intended to solve, but crappy at solving problems they were not intended to solve.
I also had a job where a 12" pipe was designed behind a commercial building and a landscaper decided to use two 6" pipes because he thought that would equal the same size. Even my 12 year old was dumbfounded by that.
I need one as well. My Backyard is almost shaped like a bowl. I have the main telephone line running across the back of my yard. On one side of the house is the cable and phone. On the other side is the gas line. So basically my only options are to run the water into my neighbors yard. The problem there is he already has standing water against his house and i'm afraid it's making the small incline between my house and his soft.
I'm thinking about a dry well, but with my soil most likely being clay I doubt that will do any good.
I also had a job where a 12" pipe was designed behind a commercial building and a landscaper decided to use two 6" pipes because he thought that would equal the same size. Even my 12 year old was dumbfounded by that.
No. French drains are meant to collect and convey subsurface water away from a particular area. True french drains are not designed or intended for collection of surface water of any kind, whether on top of the ground surface or from roofs or other impervious surfaces. They are for receiving slow, seepage type water below the ground surface. Usually for foundation protection or protection of below grade, interior spaces like basements or sunken living spaces that may be below the exterior grade.
unless I'm sadly mistaken.
It's amazing how many people are that dumb (and dumb is about all you can call it).
You are simply talking about an extension of your gutter.
A french drain is for water moving underground. Simply put, water takes the path of least resistance. A typical french drain is 1' foot wide and about 3' deep. You place about 1-2" of gravel in the bottom of the trench, then a perforated 6" PVC pipe, then backfill gravel all around it, all the way up to the top. You can put a sock around it if you want, as long as it allows water to easily pass. This intercepts the rivers of water running underground (can be ALOT, especially if you live on a hill). It is also very helpful for crawlspaces that have lower elevations than the ground around them outside the house.
Well if you live on the side of a hill you can create swales around the house. If there is an underground river flowing under the house you are 17uct. Better get sink hole insurance.