All castings shall be made accurately to dimensions to be furnished and shall be planed where marked or where otherwise necessary to secure perfectly flat and true surfaces. Allowance shall be made in the patterns so that the specified thickness shall not be reduced.

All castings shall be thoroughly cleaned and painted before rusting begins and before leaving the shop with two coats of high grade asphaltum or any other varnish that the Engineer may direct. After the castings have been placed in a satisfactory manner, all foreign adhering substances shall be removed and the castings given one additional coat of asphaltum. No castings shall be accepted the weight of which shall be less than that due to its dimensions by more than 5 per cent.

Fig. 29.—Flight Sewer at Baltimore.
Eng. Record, Vol. 59, p. 161.

Fig. 30.—Baltimore Standard Manhole Frame and Cover.

The weights of frames and covers in use vary from 200 to 600 pounds, the weight of the frame being about 5 times that of the cover. The lightest weights are used where no traffic other than an occasional pedestrian will pass over the manhole. Frames and covers weighing about 400 pounds are commonly used on residential streets, whereas 600 pound frames and covers are desirable in streets on which the traffic is heavy. The frames should be so designed that the pavement will rest firmly against it and wear at the same rate as the surrounding street surface. Experience has shown that vertical sides should be used for the outside of the frame to approach this condition, and that the frame should not be less than 8 inches high. The cover should be roughened in some desirable pattern as shown in Fig. 30. Smooth covers become dangerously slippery. Where the ventilation of the sewers is not satisfactory the manhole covers are sometimes perforated. This is undesirable from other points of view as the rising odors and vapors are obnoxious at the surface and the entering dirt and water are detrimental to the operation of the sewer. The stealing and destruction of manhole covers and the unauthorized entering of sewers has occasionally required the locking of the covers to the frame when in place. The locks commonly used consist of a tumbler which falls into place when the manhole is closed, and which can be opened only by a special wrench or hook. Adjustable frames are sometimes used where the street grade is settling, or may be raised in order that the elevation of the top of the cover may be made to conform to that of the street surface, without reconstructing the top of the manhole. One type of adjustable cover is shown in Fig. 31. Manhole covers should be so marked that the sanitary sewer can be distinguished from the storm-water sewer, and both from the telephone conduit, etc.

Fig. 31.—Adjustable Manhole Frame and Cover.

Iron steps are set into the walls of the manhole about 15 inches apart vertically to allow entrance and exit to and from the manhole. Galvanized iron is preferable to unprotected metal as the action of rust is particularly rapid in the moist air of the sewer. One type of these manhole steps is shown in Fig. 27. The steps should have a firm grip in the wall as a loose step is a source of danger.