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Old House With Smelly PipesThe bedroom has paneling. It also has a panel door where if you open it, you can see the pipes and stuff and smell the odor. I am assuming these are the toilet pipes? When I walk in the house, it smells like fish of some sort. The half bathroom on the kitchen level also smells, but with a different smell. How do I get rid of this odor. I spray lysol everyday when I come in. Could the the paneling have something to do with it? It has been there for some time. The whole house had the paneling but I took all of it out so this is the only room left with the paneling. Do I need to just change the toilets? Would that help? Or do the pipes need to be changed as well? Isn't that expensive? What else should I do? I plan to make that room my baby's room, but I am not sure if that is safe for him/her? Please help, Pooh from DC Feedback About This Post:RE: Old House With Smelly Pipes
I had a smell in my house also, in the sinks mostly. Here's what it was. In the bathroom the pipe that leads to the waste pipe was full of grunge (lead pipe). There was barely space for water to flow. Also, it was tilted towards the sink when it should be tilted towards the down pipe. The sitting water was causing the smell. I also had to replace my clay drain pipes under the basement. (just finished it yesterday). It was awful. The weeds grew so much inside the pipes that there was probably an 1.5" of space for waste to flow...causing backup. Post By Noelle (Guest Post) RE: Old House With Smelly PipesMake sure that all the drains have a section of drain pipe that is a "J" shape......under the sinks, tubs, and showers. That "J" section needs to always be in there because that lower loop will always have water standing in it... which is what blocks the stinking sewer gas from coming into your house. Sometimes a novice do-it-yourself handyman may think it's cheaper and easier to just run a "straight pipe" down the drain. Also, if you have drains that are rarely used (sinks or FLOOR drains), that water in the "loop" will evaporate and allow the sewer gas to come in and stink things up in your spare bathroom or the garage or where ever. Always pour a quart or two of water down any unused drain every few weeks. Another thing may be that the wax rings or seals that are inserted between the base of your bathroom stool and the sewer pipe/floor may have gone bad. They do need to be replaced occasionally. Those are the things I'd be checking first. Post By Grandma Margie. (Guest Post) RE: Old House With Smelly PipesI did have an inspection. It proabbly was an exsisting condition. what is legal recourse? Post by Pooh1979 RE: Old House With Smelly PipesDid you have a home inspection before buying? Was this a pre-existing conditions that previous owners failed to disclose? If so you might have legal recourse. Post By Enter your name. (Guest Post) RE: Old House With Smelly Pipes
First, you should never "smell" pipes. If you do, you've got a leak somewhere. Check that panel area with the pipes. Try to pinpoint a leak spot. Touch it with paper or your hand to see if it's wet. You might not have to replace pipes, but just re-join them: solder, pvc glue, etc. Post By Arwen (Guest Post) |
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