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Arrgh. Ain't nothing easy.
Y'all may recall the rotted out main drain line I was whining about recently. Well, I had a guy in to replace it, and although he was expensive ($1400 including new toilet flange, tub trap, and pipes up to kitchen sink drains), he was fast, and seemed to do a good job. All that works fine. However, rather than disturb the old leaded connection into the cracked/epoxied cast iron monster on the wall that leads out to the septic, he stubbed out the copper and used a Fermco. No leaks or anything, but that means the collector/trap arm on the wall for the washer and nuisance drains sits 16-18" higher than it used to. So now, my entry-level 5 YO GE washer, if I do more than a 'small' load, piddles on the floor. That only used to happen if I was washing pillows or something. Background- the original wall drain for washer, which sits 16" lower, apparently connects to nothing any more. I tested it when I moved in, and an hour later had water all over basement floor. My best guess is that it went to a now-failed or missing dry well. Been meaning to saw it off with the angle grinder and mud it over, but that is another story. Anyway, when the washer that came with house caught on fire, I had to run out to Sam's and buy the only model they had. I had to extend drain hose a couple feet to reach the other pipe on the wall, but it mostly worked okay, other than minor accidents with washing big spongy things. Now, not so much. Drain comes out of washer at the usual low-down location, and goes up 80 inches or so, and 48 inches sideways. Old drain was maybe 62? inches off floor, and original dead standpipe sits at 66 inches. Except that I feel kinda broke right now, I do have a solution- call the plumber back to install the plastic sump pit and bigass sump pump previous owner left sitting under the stairs. I had been thinking about one of those little pump-in-a-box things, and put it under the useless sink that just drains onto floor. But plumber said that would never handle the volume from a washer. Any ideas for a cheap work-around, until I feel rich enough to get guys with jackhammers involved? How much vertical pipe do I need above the trap on the drain everything is poked into? Would a smooth rather than corrugated drain line on washer help? (Nobody sells those, so I'd have to make one from elbows and clear tubing, I think.) Or should I just build a platform for the washer and dryer? Or am I missing an alternative explanation, that shifting the washer around to swap the dryer that self-destructed same week drain did, may have cracked or loosened something under the washer? As you can see from the questions, I'm no plumber. Any actual ideas or information greatly appreciated. -- aem sends... |
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