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We have an apartment attached to the house that our darling daughter lives in. Since we have owned the house we have renovated the bathroom and the kitchen. Lately dear daughter has been complaining that when she drains the kitchen sink it bubbles up into the shower. And it does.
This morning I got an auger, ran it through every drain hole I could find - no luck. Managed to break the bathroom sink drain and while sorting that out realized that there might be some virtue in replacing the whole drain pipe for the apartment - It was originally copper (1 1/2in) going into a cast iron stack and one of the pipes was even lead (the one I broke) So, if you can visualize it - every drain was attached via a compression fitting - except the lead which was just umm lead.
So, all replaced, 2 inch main line 1 1/2 inch feeding it, great slope easy peezy.
But, here is my question - when I removed the line and looked down it, it was about 3/4 clogged - with sludge - toothpaste, soap, cr*p of many tenants over the years. The auger just ran through it because there was nothing to grab on to - various drano type mixtures were poured down with really no success as it seemed to flow over it.
So, while I am actually very glad it is all to code now, what could I have done to clear the line? Or does it just come to the point where you have to replace?
thoughts?
This morning I got an auger, ran it through every drain hole I could find - no luck. Managed to break the bathroom sink drain and while sorting that out realized that there might be some virtue in replacing the whole drain pipe for the apartment - It was originally copper (1 1/2in) going into a cast iron stack and one of the pipes was even lead (the one I broke) So, if you can visualize it - every drain was attached via a compression fitting - except the lead which was just umm lead.
So, all replaced, 2 inch main line 1 1/2 inch feeding it, great slope easy peezy.
But, here is my question - when I removed the line and looked down it, it was about 3/4 clogged - with sludge - toothpaste, soap, cr*p of many tenants over the years. The auger just ran through it because there was nothing to grab on to - various drano type mixtures were poured down with really no success as it seemed to flow over it.
So, while I am actually very glad it is all to code now, what could I have done to clear the line? Or does it just come to the point where you have to replace?
thoughts?
Hey Guest!
smilie in place of the real @
Pretty Please - add it to our Events forum(s) and add to the calendar! >> 