Sewer gas smell in my home: I seriously need a good plumber to take a few minutes and read this and help me fix this problem.
I am pretty good at web searching and I have read every possible article I could find, including answers to simliar questions by other homeowners - and I still can't correct the problem.
The house is a log cabin (professionally built in 1999 from 100+ year old hand hewn logs from a torn down tobacco barn). There is a full crawlspace (4.5' high) where the furnace (high efficiency propane) and hot water heater are installed. The plumbing is easy to get to and inspect from the crawlspace.
Of course I have already eliminated the most basis causes of sewer smell. All of my drains have proper traps and none of the traps are dry. I do not have gurgling in any drains and no bubbles coming up in the toilet. The ring below the toilets are sealed properly. I can stick my nose to any drain and do not smell anything. The crawlspace is dry and clean and does not smell.
The smell becomes apparent when the furnace starts running - not always, sometimes a couple of days will go by and sometimes it will happen a couple of times every day. I have sat working at my desk for hours with the furnace kicking on and off and no smell - then all of a sudden the furnace kicks on and here comes the smell - not a light smell, but an obnoxious one. It doesn't appear to have any regular pattern or anything in particular that "sets it off" (like after running water or flushing a toilet, etc).
Because the smell seems to only happen when the furnace runs I was sure that sewer gas was somehow entering the furnace intake. I inspected the furnace and plumbing and there was only two places that the furnace connects to the septic system (the furnace condenstate drain line and the furnace in-line humidifier drain line). I have temporarily re-routed both these lines to my sump pump which bypasses the septic system and drains outside to a field. That didn't help. There are no leaks in the furnace intake ducting under the house (I inspected and re-taped all duct joints with foil tape to be sure).
So, my crawlspace does not smell, my intake ducts are sealed and taped properly and as indicated, I have removed the only direct links from the furnace to the septic system - yet I still have sewer gas entering the house through the heating vents??
I will mention that the furnace has a PVC pipe that comes out of the furnace fuel re-burner and is piped just outside the house. Whenever the sewer smell is coming in the house you can go outside and smell it clearly coming from the furnace exhaust also. I spoke to the furnace guy and he said there should not be a smell coming from that pipe - only forced air and some amount of condensate.
I went onto the roof to inspect the plumbing vents for blockage (even though I am led to believe that I should hear gurgling if the system is gasping for air) and there ARE NO VENTS on the roof (and none running up the side of the cabin). I went into the crawlspace looking for the vent lines and I found two vent lines total, one at each of the toilet drain lines. There are no traps in the toilet drain lines - they just pipe straight to the main septic line (I assume the water in the toilet bowl serves as a trap). The vent lines are attached to a fitting just above where the toilet lines connect.
I traced the vent lines into the house and to my surprise both lines enter the main floor inside the bathroom walls. The lines do not come out of the ceiling above the walls and they do not elbow out of the side of the house either. I will mention that these are not drywalled and painted walls - they are interior non-insulated walls with wood planks with enough spacing between the boards that they are by no means anywhere near air tight.
I have already looked at the possibility that I am mistaking a propane leak for a sewer smell. I have had two contractors test for propane leaks - and, with the design of the furnace which re-burns the exhaust before it leaves the house, I can't see how the smell coming from the exhaust line could possibly be propane.
I understand that log homes are unique and maybe you have to do things different because it is not feasible to drill a hole through the logs - and with the cathderal ceilings and no true attic, there is no place to route the vent lines to the roof > but is it correct to stub them off inside of a first floor wall?
I am stumped and need help.
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