hensta
Apr 27, 2008, 09:36 PM
Hello,
Not sure if I should be posting this in electrical vs plumbing. I was placing screws in the bathroom wall to secure a towel rack that my little daughter yanked off the wall :(
I used an old stud detector and it indicated a stud was behind the drywall. I then screwed in a drywall screw but it didn't feel like it hit wood and it felt like it stripped easily. I then used a small probe and it hit a plastic pipe. Soooo, I cut a hole in the wall to make sure I didn't hit a drain pipe :confused: and this is what I see.
Can anyone tell me what kind of pipe this is? Does it drain liquid or does it have wires inside of it? It is has a small 1" thick black paper strap that holds it to the wall. You can see the screw hole right in the middle of it. If I push it, it moves back then bounces forward flush against the wall. The bathroom is on the 2nd floor of a 2-story home built in 2001. Behind the wall with the rectangle hole there is a plain 4-wall bedroom with no utilities in it. Above this bathroom is the attic and I believe the water condensation drainpipe for the central AC unit in the attic goes over this bathroom, down behind this draywall, and out through the exterior wall on the first floor.
I'm worried if it is drain pipe that it will leak. Thanks.
Not sure if I should be posting this in electrical vs plumbing. I was placing screws in the bathroom wall to secure a towel rack that my little daughter yanked off the wall :(
I used an old stud detector and it indicated a stud was behind the drywall. I then screwed in a drywall screw but it didn't feel like it hit wood and it felt like it stripped easily. I then used a small probe and it hit a plastic pipe. Soooo, I cut a hole in the wall to make sure I didn't hit a drain pipe :confused: and this is what I see.
Can anyone tell me what kind of pipe this is? Does it drain liquid or does it have wires inside of it? It is has a small 1" thick black paper strap that holds it to the wall. You can see the screw hole right in the middle of it. If I push it, it moves back then bounces forward flush against the wall. The bathroom is on the 2nd floor of a 2-story home built in 2001. Behind the wall with the rectangle hole there is a plain 4-wall bedroom with no utilities in it. Above this bathroom is the attic and I believe the water condensation drainpipe for the central AC unit in the attic goes over this bathroom, down behind this draywall, and out through the exterior wall on the first floor.
I'm worried if it is drain pipe that it will leak. Thanks.