Ask Experts Questions for FREE Help !
Ask
    LEMEME's Avatar
    LEMEME Posts: 3, Reputation: 1
    New Member
     
    #1

    Apr 17, 2007, 08:36 AM
    Cracked Water Pipe in Basement
    I was just told the reason my toilet in the basement was not flushing efficiently was because of a craked water pipe. They jack hammered a 2 ft X 1 ft area and replaced the pipe and then poured new concrete. They billed me $1400 to do this. Does this sound right?:confused:

    Thanks,

    LEMEME
    speedball1's Avatar
    speedball1 Posts: 29,301, Reputation: 1939
    Eternal Plumber
     
    #2

    Apr 17, 2007, 10:46 AM
    Explain "cracked water pipe"? Water pipe= the pipes that supply hot and cold water to your fixtures. Did you mean drainage pipe?
    How was your toilet acting? Backing up on the floor? Not flushing? Flushing but not removing solids? Dide you see the section of pipe they removed? Describe it. How big around was it? How bad was the crack? And the question you should have asked before you let them tear up your floor, "How do you know the pipe's cracked since you can't see under the cement floor?"
    The only way for them to know this would be to pull the toilet and run a camera down the drain. Even if a drain line were cracked it wouldn't prevent the flow of the toilets discharge unless it was broken, not cracked, and was blocking passage. Please explain EXACTLY whatyour toilet was doing and why you called them out in the first place. I think you might have got ripped but I need more details. Regards, Tom
    LEMEME's Avatar
    LEMEME Posts: 3, Reputation: 1
    New Member
     
    #3

    Apr 17, 2007, 12:06 PM
    You are right.. It was the drainage pipe they said was cracked... They did pull up the toilet and ran a camera down and that's how they saw it was cracked. The toilet was flushing but the majority of the time it did not totally flush... some of the paper was still in the toilet. They said they removed a lot of crap from the pipe using the roto rooter. I did not see the pipe they removed. They did put clean out 2 clean outs in the location they dug since they said the pipe actually Y'd at that point. The layout of this room is there is the toilet and then a 4 ft sink section and then a shower. They jack hammered right next to the shower.

    I called them out to see why the toilet was not working well.

    Thanks for your help!

    LEMEME

Not your question? Ask your question View similar questions

 

Question Tools Search this Question
Search this Question:

Advanced Search

Add your answer here.


Check out some similar questions!

Hot water pipe touching fire sprinker pipe [ 6 Answers ]

I discovered why the water pressure in my fire prinkler system kept rising. It's because the hot water pipe is right up against the sprinkler pipe causing it to heat which then increases the pressure. Now can I wrap the pipe with insulation. Would this be a good fix? If so, should I wrap the hot...

Cracked Furnace Pipe [ 49 Answers ]

Hello everyone I have a quick question. One of the pipes which is attached to our furnace and leads outside cracked about 8 months ago. The repairman came and took care of it using waterproof adhesive sealant. A few weeks ago, another repairman came to clean up a natural gas leak and I asked...

Cinder block basement cracked [ 2 Answers ]

I have a cinder block basement that has a fair bit of settlement(Cracked about 1 inch in the biggest spot). All the movement seams to be in 1 area.The wall that is cracked does not have a footing all at the same elevation. The wall is opprox. 6ft.then steps to up from the footing 16 inches higher....

Basement sewer pipe [ 2 Answers ]

My house is about 95 yrs. Old in northeastern Pennsylvania, my sewer pipe is large and black, can you tell me what material it's made of? I can't tell if its cast iron, or cement, etc. Where there are connections, at the joints, it seems to be rusting. Can I patch or paint this? Thanks, m.h....

Help! Water backing up from pipe in basement [ 3 Answers ]

My townhouse is 1 1/2 years old and I live in the end unit. There's a 6-8 inch PVC that comes out of my basement floor. The pipe is flush with the floor and has a cover. The cover doesn't screw or snap on, it just sits on top of the pipe. 8 or 10 inches down the pipe is a cap that screws on. ...


View more questions Search