Dishwasher draining into Cabinetry
I had a contractor replace a sink that had an airgap with a sink that did not. There has been at least 3 separate incidences where water has flowed out of the dishwasher and through the overflow hose and emptied right into our cabinet below the sink. The overflow hose isntconnected into anything. The contractor had told me that the water would just flow into the disposal and down the main drain. That hasn't happened and that contractor went AWOL. How can I fix?
Comment on massplumber2008's post
The job was completed about 9 months ago. The contractor won a bid on another project in the house and said he could do this one as well for no cost, so there wasn't a permit pulled to replace the sink and install a garbage disposal. The contractor who installed the sink is now in jail on missing child support payments, so he'll be no help. Our previous stainless steel sink had the air gap coming out the top of the sink through one of the prefabricated holes. The installed 4-hole sink only had room for faucet, sprayer and hot/cold handles. Contractor told us airgap could be looped underneath and wouldn't be a problem because dishwasher hose is connected to disposal so all run-off water would go through disposal. The diagram on one of your answers was very helpful. The disposal installed has the dishwasher inlet pipe at the top and a second pipe that flows into the main drain. The knockout was removed.
Comment on massplumber2008's post
The dishwasher hose comes through at the base of the cabinetry and then is looped up to the top of the cabinetry and connects to the disposal hose that takes the water down to the disposal. I could remove the two clamps and the hose and see if there is an impediment/clog in the hose that is causing the water to go out the end of the air gap?
We really do not want to have to buy another new sink with five holes (instead of four) because of the money spent on this one (I don't think Lowe's will take their sink back). I guess we could remove the sprayer connection and have the air gap come through that existing prefabricated hole. That doesn't solve the current overflow problem. Perhaps if I can take the hose and clamps off, there could be a clog or obstruction that is causing the water to come out the overflow.
I've read many people who connect their airgap under their cabinetry and its never been a problem - perhaps I am the one exception.
Comment on ebaines's post
The job was completed about 9 months ago. The contractor won a bid on another project in the house and said he could do this one as well for no cost, so there wasn't a permit pulled to replace the sink and install a garbage disposal. The contractor who installed the sink is now in jail on missing child support payments, so he'll be no help. Our previous stainless steel sink had the air gap coming out the top of the sink through one of the prefabricated holes. The installed 4-hole sink only had room for faucet, sprayer and hot/cold handles. Contractor told us airgap could be looped underneath and wouldn't be a problem because dishwasher hose is connected to disposal so all run-off water would go through disposal. The diagram on one of your answers was very helpful. The disposal installed has the dishwasher inlet pipe at the top and a second pipe that flows into the main drain. The knockout was removed.
Comment on ebaines's post
The dishwasher hose comes through at the base of the cabinetry and then is looped up to the top of the cabinetry and connects to the disposal hose that takes the water down to the disposal. I could remove the two clamps and the hose and see if there is an impediment/clog in the hose that is causing the water to go out the end of the air gap?
We really do not want to have to buy another new sink with five holes (instead of four) because of the money spent on this one (I don't think Lowe's will take their sink back). I guess we could remove the sprayer connection and have the air gap come through that existing prefabricated hole. That doesn't solve the current overflow problem. Perhaps if I can take the hose and clamps off, there could be a clog or obstruction that is causing the water to come out the overflow.
I've read many people who connect their airgap under their cabinetry and its never been a problem - perhaps I am the one exception.
Comment on joypulv's post
The job was completed about 9 months ago. The contractor won a bid on another project in the house and said he could do this one as well for no cost, so there wasn't a permit pulled to replace the sink and install a garbage disposal. The contractor who installed the sink is now in jail on missing child support payments, so he'll be no help. Our previous stainless steel sink had the air gap coming out the top of the sink through one of the prefabricated holes. The installed 4-hole sink only had room for faucet, sprayer and hot/cold handles. Contractor told us airgap could be looped underneath and wouldn't be a problem because dishwasher hose is connected to disposal so all run-off water would go through disposal. The diagram on one of your answers was very helpful. The disposal installed has the dishwasher inlet pipe at the top and a second pipe that flows into the main drain. The knockout was removed.
Comment on joypulv's post
The dishwasher hose comes through at the base of the cabinetry and then is looped up to the top of the cabinetry and connects to the disposal hose that takes the water down to the disposal. I could remove the two clamps and the hose and see if there is an impediment/clog in the hose that is causing the water to go out the end of the air gap?
We really do not want to have to buy another new sink with five holes (instead of four) because of the money spent on this one (I don't think Lowe's will take their sink back). I guess we could remove the sprayer connection and have the air gap come through that existing prefabricated hole. That doesn't solve the current overflow problem. Perhaps if I can take the hose and clamps off, there could be a clog or obstruction that is causing the water to come out the overflow.
I've read many people who connect their airgap under their cabinetry and its never been a problem - perhaps I am the one exception.