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Originally Posted by speede5 I busted up the floor in our basement to put in a bathroom. I was going to tie into the main drain line about 5 feet from the stack and replace the base of the stack. i also wanted to change the existing floor drain which ties in 5 feet further down the line. I busted it all out and the main drain line (cast) had 5 small (1/4) holes in it. i was pretty sure I did this with the jackhammer but i could fit my pinkie in one and it felt thin. my question is how far should i go with this. i have 10 more feet to get to the front cleanout, but it is on the other side of the wall in a different room and will be a disasterous mess. Do I keep tearing up the floor or stop now and replace what is exposed? If the rest of the pipe is kinda thin will i regret not changing it in 5-10 years? |
That's a toughie!! On the one hand you wonder if all your cast iron is fulla holes and needs to be replaced while on the other you don't want to tear up your house and spend big bucks if it isn't really necessary. While the vibration from the jackhammer might have caused the holes the cast iron was thin to began with. Being in your situation, (I live in a 53 year old home with thinning cast iron pipe walls,) I can sympathize with you.
I guess I would take a set of ratchet cutters and cut out the bad section and replace with PVC using No-Hub Bands and hoipe for the best. However, If I could see that the rest of the cast iron was in bad shape I'd "bite the bullet" and start replacing the faulty pipes. Good luck in whatever you decide. Tom