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[email protected] October 6th 06 04:35 PM

Snaking a Clogged Pipe
 
The pipe attached to the basement drain of my 1971-built home is
partially clogged. (If I run a hose for about 10 minutes, the water
starts to back up.) I believe that the drainage pipe needs to be
snaked, but I am afraid that if someone does it improperly, matters
will get worse rather than better. (I suspect that a clogged pipe can
be easily broken). So before I hire someone to do this, I would like
to know what to avoid when the pipe is snaked and how to find a
competent person who will charge me a fair rate. I should add that
there is a silver maple in the front yard where the pipe drains, and I
understand that those types of maples attack pipes vigorously. Any
help would be appreciated.

Thanks,

JD


Speedy Jim October 6th 06 04:56 PM

Snaking a Clogged Pipe
 
wrote:

The pipe attached to the basement drain of my 1971-built home is
partially clogged. (If I run a hose for about 10 minutes, the water
starts to back up.) I believe that the drainage pipe needs to be
snaked, but I am afraid that if someone does it improperly, matters
will get worse rather than better. (I suspect that a clogged pipe can
be easily broken). So before I hire someone to do this, I would like
to know what to avoid when the pipe is snaked and how to find a
competent person who will charge me a fair rate. I should add that
there is a silver maple in the front yard where the pipe drains, and I
understand that those types of maples attack pipes vigorously. Any
help would be appreciated.

Thanks,

JD


Yep, Maples are about the worst. If they find a 1/16" opening,
they can fill a 6" pipe with fine root hairs.

It takes a pro sewer machine to snake large drains, esp over
long distances. If you are up to the effort, you can rent one.
It may cost ~$200 for someone to do it. YMMV

I wouldn't be overly concerned about damaging the pipe.

Alternate: Apply root killer and hope for the best/.

peter October 6th 06 05:44 PM

Snaking a Clogged Pipe
 
wrote in message
ups.com...
The pipe attached to the basement drain of my 1971-built home is
partially clogged. (If I run a hose for about 10 minutes, the water
starts to back up.) I believe that the drainage pipe needs to be
snaked, but I am afraid that if someone does it improperly, matters
will get worse rather than better. (I suspect that a clogged pipe can
be easily broken). So before I hire someone to do this, I would like
to know what to avoid when the pipe is snaked and how to find a
competent person who will charge me a fair rate. I should add that
there is a silver maple in the front yard where the pipe drains, and I
understand that those types of maples attack pipes vigorously. Any
help would be appreciated.


in addition to snaking, plumbers may also use a jetter and pipe camera



The Ranger October 6th 06 06:26 PM

Snaking a Clogged Pipe
 
peter wrote in message
news:QJvVg.311$YD.277@trndny09...
[snip]
in addition to snaking, plumbers may also use a jetter
and pipe camera


Buyer bewa I've been quoted US$760 (an independent plumber) to
US$1500 (national chain) for this option. While it seems like a good
idea -- especially when you know the pipe has a break near the
city-owned entrance to the sewers -- it's often a grand waste of
money and time. A good roto-rooter guy can have the job done in 30
minutes and tell you exactly what's going on causing your backflow
problem. (We have liquid amber lining our street so drains up and
down the neighborhood clog regularly due to roots finding access
through the pipes.)

My single recommendation: Don't go with that national company with
"Roto" in its name.

The Ranger



Joseph Meehan October 6th 06 08:08 PM

Snaking a Clogged Pipe
 
wrote:
The pipe attached to the basement drain of my 1971-built home is
partially clogged. (If I run a hose for about 10 minutes, the water
starts to back up.) I believe that the drainage pipe needs to be
snaked, but I am afraid that if someone does it improperly, matters
will get worse rather than better. (I suspect that a clogged pipe can
be easily broken). So before I hire someone to do this, I would like
to know what to avoid when the pipe is snaked and how to find a
competent person who will charge me a fair rate. I should add that
there is a silver maple in the front yard where the pipe drains, and I
understand that those types of maples attack pipes vigorously. Any
help would be appreciated.

Thanks,

JD


To tell you the honest hard truth, if you want to fix it you are going
to have someone do some digging.

What happens is the pipe (especially the stuff using at the time your
home was built) was never totally waterproof. The roots follow the water
into the pipe and make the leak larger. You can clean it, but the next time
it will be back sooner.

With the pipe replaced and totally waterproof the tree roots will think
it is a rock and go around it.



--
Joseph Meehan

Dia duit



Art Todesco October 6th 06 08:14 PM

Snaking a Clogged Pipe
 
Joseph Meehan wrote:
wrote:

The pipe attached to the basement drain of my 1971-built home is
partially clogged. (If I run a hose for about 10 minutes, the water
starts to back up.) I believe that the drainage pipe needs to be
snaked, but I am afraid that if someone does it improperly, matters
will get worse rather than better. (I suspect that a clogged pipe can
be easily broken). So before I hire someone to do this, I would like
to know what to avoid when the pipe is snaked and how to find a
competent person who will charge me a fair rate. I should add that
there is a silver maple in the front yard where the pipe drains, and I
understand that those types of maples attack pipes vigorously. Any
help would be appreciated.

Thanks,

JD



To tell you the honest hard truth, if you want to fix it you are going
to have someone do some digging.

What happens is the pipe (especially the stuff using at the time your
home was built) was never totally waterproof. The roots follow the water
into the pipe and make the leak larger. You can clean it, but the next time
it will be back sooner.

With the pipe replaced and totally waterproof the tree roots will think
it is a rock and go around it.


I would say it has a lot to do with what
types of pipe you have. In my 34 year
old house, the pipe under the basement
floor is cast iron. Good, I thought.
Outside of the house to the street it is
plastic. When it plugged in a similar
fashion to that of the OP, I tried
renting a power auger. I apparently was
not aggressive enough. So, call out the
plumber. He used a smaller auger, went
in through the cleanout whick I
installed, and charged $400. But, he
did fix it. Cast iron, through the
years rusts inside, and gets smaller
diameter (due to the rust) and rougher.
It catches lint, etc. Now, if the OP
has clay tile pipes and the tree has
done it's damage, I'd say it might be a
dig job. However, I had a friend with
such a problem where a bi-yearly routing
did the trick.

[email protected] October 6th 06 10:56 PM

Snaking a Clogged Pipe
 
On 6 Oct 2006 08:35:31 -0700, "
wrote:

The pipe attached to the basement drain of my 1971-built home is
partially clogged. (If I run a hose for about 10 minutes, the water
starts to back up.) I believe that the drainage pipe needs to be
snaked, but I am afraid that if someone does it improperly, matters
will get worse rather than better. (I suspect that a clogged pipe can
be easily broken). So before I hire someone to do this, I would like
to know what to avoid when the pipe is snaked and how to find a
competent person who will charge me a fair rate. I should add that
there is a silver maple in the front yard where the pipe drains, and I
understand that those types of maples attack pipes vigorously. Any
help would be appreciated.

Thanks,

JD



Just in case, you might try calling your city engineering department.
Mine will come at least twice a year to clean the roots out of the
sewer line.

[email protected] October 6th 06 10:58 PM

Snaking a Clogged Pipe
 
On Fri, 06 Oct 2006 21:56:31 GMT, wrote:

On 6 Oct 2006 08:35:31 -0700, "
wrote:

The pipe attached to the basement drain of my 1971-built home is
partially clogged. (If I run a hose for about 10 minutes, the water
starts to back up.) I believe that the drainage pipe needs to be
snaked, but I am afraid that if someone does it improperly, matters
will get worse rather than better. (I suspect that a clogged pipe can
be easily broken). So before I hire someone to do this, I would like
to know what to avoid when the pipe is snaked and how to find a
competent person who will charge me a fair rate. I should add that
there is a silver maple in the front yard where the pipe drains, and I
understand that those types of maples attack pipes vigorously. Any
help would be appreciated.

Thanks,

JD



Just in case, you might try calling your city engineering department.
Mine will come at least twice a year to clean the roots out of the
sewer line.


I should have added "at no charge".

bob kater October 7th 06 12:19 AM

Snaking a Clogged Pipe
 
roter rooter. with a root cutter on the end most gice a guarantee for a
year.
wrote in message
ups.com...
The pipe attached to the basement drain of my 1971-built home is
partially clogged. (If I run a hose for about 10 minutes, the water
starts to back up.) I believe that the drainage pipe needs to be
snaked, but I am afraid that if someone does it improperly, matters
will get worse rather than better. (I suspect that a clogged pipe can
be easily broken). So before I hire someone to do this, I would like
to know what to avoid when the pipe is snaked and how to find a
competent person who will charge me a fair rate. I should add that
there is a silver maple in the front yard where the pipe drains, and I
understand that those types of maples attack pipes vigorously. Any
help would be appreciated.

Thanks,

JD





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