I have a 16 year old house. On one side, the only fixture is the kitchen sink. On the other is everything else - two bathrooms. The sink drain line goes about 20' across, y's into a 3" pipe that handles everything except one tub. Then the tub y's in a few feet away, and the pipe goes down 3', across the wall and out.
My problem is the kitchen sink and a lavatory sink drain slowly if a lot of water has been used (to clean dishes, shave). No chugging, just slow. If I disturb the kitchen strainer ever so slightly during a slow drain, it seems to relieve a vacuum, and the flow increases greatly. The strainer is not worn or clogged. For short uses, they drain fine. The toilets and shower drain fine also.
Separately, I just had my septic system pumped. I opened the cleanout plug at the exit, and I could see the 10' long pipe going to the septic tank sags at least 3" in the center, evidently from settling. The pipe appeared clean, except some water obviously sitting in the middle.
I just cleaned the kitchen sink trap and pipe going to the wall of scum. Last year I did the same with the lav sink. I went on the roof, and inspected the vent to the kitchen sink. I could see down to the elbow which I believe connects to the horizontal drain line (I assume the sink connects in with a tee above that). I have not yet gotten to the upper roof to inspect the lav vent.
I am a bit perplexed. Could scum like I saw in the trap form over the connection to the vent? Could the sag in the exterior line be related? I am planning to excavate that line and straighten it as weather permits, but I am looking for tips. Thank you!