Diet Pepsi Girl
Dec 1, 2008, 09:14 AM
I just bought my house back in June of 2008. The washing machine came with the house, and is from 2001. The washing machine started backing up at the part of the cycle when it drains the water out. The water was black and nasty, and spilled out onto the floor. I found out that the field lines in my septic tank had failed. Thousands of dollars later, we are switched to city sewer, however the washer still backs up (but the water is clean and soapy smelling- yay! :) ) The washing machine is in the basement. The main line runs down from the kitchen sink, and splits to allow the water to drain from the washer.
I have ordered the rubber washer from Sears. I realized it had a crack in it when I was examining the rubber hose that drains the water out into the pipe. I don't think that the pipe is clogged. It was snaked by the company when they first were trying to find the septic tank by running this loud grinding thing through the pipes out to the septic tank (they said that the sound would tell them where the tank was). The drains in the kitchens, bathroooms, etc, never back up and everything works fine. It's just the darn washing machine.
Do you think it could be overflowing just because of a cracked rubber washer? We have snaked the entire pipe and like I said, are completely on a city sewer now. This plumber keeps telling me he thinks there is a clog in the pipe, but if everything else works fine, and the thing has been snaked, I don't see how it's affecting the washing machine.
I have ordered the rubber washer from Sears. I realized it had a crack in it when I was examining the rubber hose that drains the water out into the pipe. I don't think that the pipe is clogged. It was snaked by the company when they first were trying to find the septic tank by running this loud grinding thing through the pipes out to the septic tank (they said that the sound would tell them where the tank was). The drains in the kitchens, bathroooms, etc, never back up and everything works fine. It's just the darn washing machine.
Do you think it could be overflowing just because of a cracked rubber washer? We have snaked the entire pipe and like I said, are completely on a city sewer now. This plumber keeps telling me he thinks there is a clog in the pipe, but if everything else works fine, and the thing has been snaked, I don't see how it's affecting the washing machine.