My first house... and already a (big) issue -- stack pipe
My wife and I just purchased our first house last Wednesday and moved in the next day... it's 78 years old and in the city...
Well, there were some issues to begin with... a 78 year old toilet to fix the internals on and some under-sink drain plumbing to do... but I got all of that done fairly easily.
After I fixed the kitchen sink, I was feeling quite good about myself (it always feels good to get a job done well). A couple of days later, I was in the basement, washing my hands in the big sink, and I noticed that there were some suds and water coming from the "stack pipe" (whatever it's actually called) coming from the kitchen. It apparently leaked from when my wife drained her dishwater. It does not leak when just running water down the drain.
This is leaking about 2-3" from the cement floor, and there is actually already a rubber patch clamped onto exactly where the leak is coming from.
So, this pipe is 3" or 4" 78 year old iron, and isn't in the greatest of shape. Unlike the other stack pipes in the house, the exterior is rusty on this one, probably from exterior water at some point in time. So, I would imagine that it's on its last legs. It takes water from the kitchen sink and maybe the 3rd floor bathroom (which we don't use).
I'm a big DIY-er (and am fiscally stretched enough), so I'm wondering what would have to be done to fix this. I doubt that another patch is do-able, and the pipe that is leaking is poured into the cement. There is no joint above the floor to just replace that pipe. So, what would be a common method to fix this? Am I looking at having concrete broken up for this? Also, can you give me a ballpark idea of a what I'm looking at to get this done (under $500, under $1k, under $2k)? What's the typical method for replacing/re-threading/connecting to an iron stack pipe with no joint, even once you clear out far enough to cut the pipe cleanly?
Also, for a robust DIY-er, what do you think? Do I have a chance? The way that I figure, all that I need to do is tools, knowledge, and experience. Tools I can rent or buy, knowledge is what I'm asking here for, and experience I only get by doing it.
Thanks in advance for any advice/help!
~Ben