MacMcMacmac
Well-known member
I have a friend who I'm quite sure has a plugged sewer lateral. I have a good idea why, but talking about it leads to the exchange of heated opinions, so lets just say it's not a collapsed pipe or root intrusions.
Floor drains back up when the washer drains. Not a lot, about a 5 sq ft circle of water, so it is obviously still passing some water through. The drains will revert back to normal level if left alone.
She is not able to undertake this herself. She's not flush with cash and is worried about a large plumbing bill.
She thinks the problem is the huge amount of rain we received on the 1st. Many flooded basements here, but not hers. She thinks the sewer is overloaded and it's preventing the evacuation of her line. I said that's highly unlikely 72 hrs after the event, but she wants to wait another day to make sure. I've explained sanitary vs storm sewer but it hasn't changed her mind.
So, having once again to defer to "the internet" wisdom, I have to wait another day for things to shake out before the inevitable realization the the lateral is indeed plugged.
So, seeing as how this will once again fall to me to take care of, can someone suggest what I would need? I see snakes for rent from Home Depot. I have seen old style flat steel band snakes being used for this purpose before. It had a large brush head on the end. It worked well.
I'm wondering what the difference is between a 1/2" and 5/8" snake is. Drive cable size? Do the heads pull themselves forward, or must they be hand fed?
Would you recommend renting a camera as well? Can both be used at the same time to monitor progress, obviously keeping the camera back from the cutting head.
I told her to get an estimate for the job and hire a pro, but she figures shes always going to get screwed.
Looking forward to this like a kick in the nads. Happy 4th!
Floor drains back up when the washer drains. Not a lot, about a 5 sq ft circle of water, so it is obviously still passing some water through. The drains will revert back to normal level if left alone.
She is not able to undertake this herself. She's not flush with cash and is worried about a large plumbing bill.
She thinks the problem is the huge amount of rain we received on the 1st. Many flooded basements here, but not hers. She thinks the sewer is overloaded and it's preventing the evacuation of her line. I said that's highly unlikely 72 hrs after the event, but she wants to wait another day to make sure. I've explained sanitary vs storm sewer but it hasn't changed her mind.
So, having once again to defer to "the internet" wisdom, I have to wait another day for things to shake out before the inevitable realization the the lateral is indeed plugged.
So, seeing as how this will once again fall to me to take care of, can someone suggest what I would need? I see snakes for rent from Home Depot. I have seen old style flat steel band snakes being used for this purpose before. It had a large brush head on the end. It worked well.
I'm wondering what the difference is between a 1/2" and 5/8" snake is. Drive cable size? Do the heads pull themselves forward, or must they be hand fed?
Would you recommend renting a camera as well? Can both be used at the same time to monitor progress, obviously keeping the camera back from the cutting head.
I told her to get an estimate for the job and hire a pro, but she figures shes always going to get screwed.
Looking forward to this like a kick in the nads. Happy 4th!