Platonic Solid
Well-known member
I'll start with the primary question (if you don't want to read the whole story):
Is there some kind of heating device that works internal or external to a 2" ABS water only dry-well drain pipe?
The whole story: (Started with this thread "Plumbing DWV question")
I moved the furnace condensate drain from electric pump to directly draining into plumbing and all seemed fine for a while. Came home from work Friday to find the garage filled with water from the washing machine. Girlfriend says: “I noticed a little water in the garage near the new furnace drain this morning while looking for the ice scraper.” To which I replied:” Then why did you run the washing machine this afternoon?”
Anyway, it’s not actually the new furnace condensate drain I installed causing the problem. Had I not installed it, all the water would have been at the washing machine in the house. So this 2” ABS drywell drain pipe runs from laundry sink and washing machine through the wall into the garage (next to the furnace) then takes a right turn into an uninsulated 8’x10’ shed (that some previous owner attached to the house) built on a slab that is about 9” below the house slab height. The pipe then exits the shed to the outside and makes a 90° turn into the ground. In the shed I discover an open Wye pipe with a frozen solid waterfall coming out of it.
Obviously none of this is done right and it explains why the sill of one shed walls is completely rotted away (I can push the wall and it moves). I need a temporary solution until I can get this fixed properly. I purchased a water pipe heater thinking I’d just wrap the ABS pipe with it then insulate it, but the instructions state “only for use on pipes always filled with water” and “not for use on drain pipes”. Also this does little to address the 90° angled pipe outside the shed.
I don't think the new furnace condensate drain has helped things any. The water from the furnace now slowly drips into the drain, thus making it more likely to freeze than when it was connected to the electric condensate pump.
I currently have an electric heater in the shed, but that's too expensive to keep that way all winter (though I may have no choice) and it does nothing to address the 90° angle outside the shed. The water in the pipe has thawed in the shed, but it's still clogged further down. I poured ice melt in there yesterday, but still clogged this morning.
Is there some kind of heating device that works internal or external to a 2" ABS water only dry-well drain pipe?
The whole story: (Started with this thread "Plumbing DWV question")
I moved the furnace condensate drain from electric pump to directly draining into plumbing and all seemed fine for a while. Came home from work Friday to find the garage filled with water from the washing machine. Girlfriend says: “I noticed a little water in the garage near the new furnace drain this morning while looking for the ice scraper.” To which I replied:” Then why did you run the washing machine this afternoon?”
Anyway, it’s not actually the new furnace condensate drain I installed causing the problem. Had I not installed it, all the water would have been at the washing machine in the house. So this 2” ABS drywell drain pipe runs from laundry sink and washing machine through the wall into the garage (next to the furnace) then takes a right turn into an uninsulated 8’x10’ shed (that some previous owner attached to the house) built on a slab that is about 9” below the house slab height. The pipe then exits the shed to the outside and makes a 90° turn into the ground. In the shed I discover an open Wye pipe with a frozen solid waterfall coming out of it.
Obviously none of this is done right and it explains why the sill of one shed walls is completely rotted away (I can push the wall and it moves). I need a temporary solution until I can get this fixed properly. I purchased a water pipe heater thinking I’d just wrap the ABS pipe with it then insulate it, but the instructions state “only for use on pipes always filled with water” and “not for use on drain pipes”. Also this does little to address the 90° angled pipe outside the shed.
I don't think the new furnace condensate drain has helped things any. The water from the furnace now slowly drips into the drain, thus making it more likely to freeze than when it was connected to the electric condensate pump.
I currently have an electric heater in the shed, but that's too expensive to keep that way all winter (though I may have no choice) and it does nothing to address the 90° angle outside the shed. The water in the pipe has thawed in the shed, but it's still clogged further down. I poured ice melt in there yesterday, but still clogged this morning.
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Thanks everyone for the advice