brasha
Jul 15, 2011, 08:48 AM
Shower drain (25 years old) is leaking to basement below - water seems to be coming from edges of floor cutout and not directly down the outside of the ABS drain pipe itself (see photo). About 7 years ago, had same problem and seemed to resolve it by working from the floor in shower stall to (1) remove the top metal drain grate and then (2) apply silicone caulking under the "lip" of the circular rim of the plastic drain (see photo). It appeared there was old caulking there that had deteriorated - not sure if this would have been part of the original installation. I'm also not sure if there is a rubber gasket of some type under the top plastic drain that may be in need of replacement.
I'm trying to determine if the top white plastic drain can be screwed out to put in a new gasket and/or silicone caulking. As seen in the photo, there are 4 plastic "posts" protruding from the inside of the drain piece and wondering if these are indended to be used with pliers, or some special tool(?? ), to unscrew the piece. The tile floor is ceramic tile so I'm not sure if the tile and grout might prevent the drain from being unscrewed (if it is intended to be unscrewed).
I'd appreciate any advice you can provide on how the drain piece might have been installed (screw-in, gasket, caulking, etc) and what suggestions you have on trying to eliminate the leaking.
Thanks, Brad
I'm trying to determine if the top white plastic drain can be screwed out to put in a new gasket and/or silicone caulking. As seen in the photo, there are 4 plastic "posts" protruding from the inside of the drain piece and wondering if these are indended to be used with pliers, or some special tool(?? ), to unscrew the piece. The tile floor is ceramic tile so I'm not sure if the tile and grout might prevent the drain from being unscrewed (if it is intended to be unscrewed).
I'd appreciate any advice you can provide on how the drain piece might have been installed (screw-in, gasket, caulking, etc) and what suggestions you have on trying to eliminate the leaking.
Thanks, Brad