I have a leak in my fiberglass shower drain on the second floor. There is a unique situation I'd like to describe and try to get some answers. My drain leak started when my shower head started to leak. That's another long story but I think I finally have that fixed now. It dripped about a gallon a week so it was fairly significant. What's interesting though is that the drain didn't leak into my ceiling below when taking a shower. Again, it only leaked below when the slow drip began.
My theory is that when standing in the fiberglass shower, it compresses some part of the drain sealing whatever space there is. Does this sound reasonable?
One more thing. When I shine a flashlight into the drain, I see what I think is a gap in the PVC piping between the drain and the trap. What on earth could this be? I tried using a coat hanger to see if the gap is completely open and it doesn't appear it is. It feels like there is a gap but it's sealed.
Finally, I'm sure you need to know that the house was built in 1996 in case some type of plumbing standard was different back then. However I'm not sure there were any standards applied in this house. An acquaintance didn't understand why I was repairing the shower head leak by turning off my water main. I explained that there were no shut offs anywhere except at the main. I was told that this is incorrect and shouldn't be possible. Who knows. I'm not a plumbing expert.
Thanks for any help you can provide!
My theory is that when standing in the fiberglass shower, it compresses some part of the drain sealing whatever space there is. Does this sound reasonable?
One more thing. When I shine a flashlight into the drain, I see what I think is a gap in the PVC piping between the drain and the trap. What on earth could this be? I tried using a coat hanger to see if the gap is completely open and it doesn't appear it is. It feels like there is a gap but it's sealed.
Finally, I'm sure you need to know that the house was built in 1996 in case some type of plumbing standard was different back then. However I'm not sure there were any standards applied in this house. An acquaintance didn't understand why I was repairing the shower head leak by turning off my water main. I explained that there were no shut offs anywhere except at the main. I was told that this is incorrect and shouldn't be possible. Who knows. I'm not a plumbing expert.
Thanks for any help you can provide!
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