Nobody can find the septic tank
We want to pump out the septic tank, but no one can find it. Previous owner doesn't know where it is, and the health department has no record because the house is so old.
We've had various plumbers and septic people out to the house, most of which probed the ground with a stick. One guy snaked the clean out, and eventually found a concrete tank, but that turned out to be a small grease-trap tank, fed only be the kitchen sink.
What are the "high-tech" options available? One guy has a camera that goes down the pipe. How does that work? Can he see the turns and therefore deduce where the tank is?
Is there such a device that you flush down the toilet and track it's location from the surface like some sort of anti-submarine warfare drill.
Thanks,
Glenn
Nobody can find the septic tank
Hi Glen, Welcome back,
Well the camera isn't going to work unless you can track it. How far down in the ground are your sewer pipes and what are they made of?
We start at the cleanout and probe the sewer line until we hit the septic tank. But then I live in Florida where the lines aren't buried as deep as they are up north. If the lines are cast iron, then down here we locate hidden underground lines with a magnetometer. This is a senitive "dip needle" magnet that You run over the ground until the needle dips down indicating metal underneith.
The only other way, since you've already located the grease trap would be to probe the line out of the grease trep over to the septic tank or to dig down every 5 foot or so and track the sewer line from the cleanout to the septic tank. Good luck, Tom
Nobody can find the septic tank
Thanks, Tom.
Seems the kitchen sink going to the grease trap is totally separate from the rest of the house. When the grease trap was open, only water from the kitchen sink showed up, all the other water was going somewhere else. I recall seeing two pipes going into the slab, one was a 1-1/2" PVC fed by the kitchen sink and one was a 3" PVC fed from all over the house.
How important is the grease trap? We've recently installed a second kitchen in the house, and that kitchen sink goes to the aforementioned AWOL septic tank. Should I be concerned that the grease is not being trapped?
A plumber is now telling us he has an electronic "egg" he will flush down the toilet for $75 that he can track from the surface. We'll see how well it works.
Glenn