Here's the setup: The original structure of the house was built in 1920, the basement was poured sometime in the 50's. There are two DWV stacks, both added about the same time as the basement floor, one for the main part of the house, one for an addition on the back.
Having to move a washer/drier to the basement, and I have two choices for draining the washing machine. The main stack for the upstairs bathroom is behind a concrete block wall. Cutting access through that wall, then putting a rubber collar on the stack (which is cast iron) then connecting my PVC pipe is straightforward - I think. If anyone would like to comment on that, I'd be grateful.
The other option is a floor drain in the area where the washer will go. I assume it's an iron pipe because, well, what I can see is shaped like a Tee and is a little rusty around the edges. About 8 or 9" down a horizontal pipe takes over. I've shone a light into that pipe either direction and - using a mirror - can see that it continues in both directions (north to south) as far as the light will shine. Which isn't much, admittedly.
I've been using it to drain a utility sink, and the air conditioner's drained into it for years. It drains fine - the utility sink drains as fast as the washing machine does - so it's vented somehow, isn't it? There's never been the smell of sewer gas in the basement. Flushing the toilets (one uses the stack for the main part of the house, one uses the addition) causes no ripples in the water I can see - come to think of it, I can't remember ever seeing that pipe in the floor without water in it, though the current is slow, north to south.
So, I can drain into the pipe if tapping into the main stack proves too daunting, but I'd like to know what's going on there. Anyone encounter a situation like this before? Is there a way - short of using a jackhammer - to figure out where the pipe goes?
- Wm Morris
Having to move a washer/drier to the basement, and I have two choices for draining the washing machine. The main stack for the upstairs bathroom is behind a concrete block wall. Cutting access through that wall, then putting a rubber collar on the stack (which is cast iron) then connecting my PVC pipe is straightforward - I think. If anyone would like to comment on that, I'd be grateful.
The other option is a floor drain in the area where the washer will go. I assume it's an iron pipe because, well, what I can see is shaped like a Tee and is a little rusty around the edges. About 8 or 9" down a horizontal pipe takes over. I've shone a light into that pipe either direction and - using a mirror - can see that it continues in both directions (north to south) as far as the light will shine. Which isn't much, admittedly.
I've been using it to drain a utility sink, and the air conditioner's drained into it for years. It drains fine - the utility sink drains as fast as the washing machine does - so it's vented somehow, isn't it? There's never been the smell of sewer gas in the basement. Flushing the toilets (one uses the stack for the main part of the house, one uses the addition) causes no ripples in the water I can see - come to think of it, I can't remember ever seeing that pipe in the floor without water in it, though the current is slow, north to south.
So, I can drain into the pipe if tapping into the main stack proves too daunting, but I'd like to know what's going on there. Anyone encounter a situation like this before? Is there a way - short of using a jackhammer - to figure out where the pipe goes?
- Wm Morris
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