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On this rural property, we came out, laid the full system out, made all the pipe connections, called for inspection, passed, and had the skid steer running final backfill all in the same day. Start to finish. That kind of turnaround isn't luck - it's the result of knowing what the inspector wants to see before they even show up.
The system itself is a solid setup. The infiltrator chambers run two parallel trenches out into the field, fed by a properly leveled tank and a distribution box that splits flow evenly to both lines. Every connection point was verified before we buried anything. The inspection report even noted the tank is level and the filter is installed - that's exactly what you want to see on a passing sheet.
We work a lot of these wide-open desert properties in Apache County and surrounding areas, and the sandy native soil out here actually drains well when the system is sized and laid out correctly. Get it wrong and you're dealing with ponding and failures years down the road. Get it right and the system handles what it's designed for without issue.
That's what good septic installation services come down to - proper layout, clean connections, and the experience to know how all the pieces work together. If you've got a rural property that needs a new system, this is the kind of work we do every day.