03-29-2017, 07:11 AM
(This post was last modified: 03-29-2017, 07:12 AM by Destinmatt.)
Our 1970's house was vacant for several years before we purchased a year ago. After we moved in we had numerous plumbing issues with the guest bathroom. After a LARGE sum of money, a national plumbing company in our area scoped the main waste line, put in a clean out and jetted the cast iron line clean. They then told us it had a long crack under the house (can't remember but 10-30ft long) and wanted $17k to fix it. We asked about some of the cheaper options with them (trenchless repair with a sleeve or pipe fracturing) and they dismissed these options. We told them to get lost and have gone without a hall bathroom since.
My question is, can we just bypass this main line for the bathroom and route it around the house? To our knowledge the Kitchen, HVAC drain, and hall bathroom are on the main septic line. Our clothes washer is presumably plumed to this line, but it was already diverted as grey water when we moved in. We have had no issue with the kitchen waste line and the HVAC drain has been fine since the line was jet cleaned. Even when the bathroom clogs, the kitchen/HVAC are fine.
Presumably to reroute we would need to plug/cap the waste line distal to where the sink/shower/toilet all meet. The toilet is against the exterior wall. We would somehow divert from there down below the footer or through the concrete footer (concrete slab foundation) and then trench around to the septic tank.
To sum up, is this possible? If so, is it ok to punch through the concrete footer to ensure proper slope for the waste pipe? How would I cap the cast iron pipe and would I likely need to demo the bathroom to do it? The sink drain line heads toward the toilet (exterior wall/not toward main line) Have no idea where the shower drains. As an added note, we are outside the city and have no permits/inspectors/HOA.
Brown= septic tanks (we have two)
Red lines= assumed course of current cast iron sewage line
Blue lines = proposed route of bypass line
My question is, can we just bypass this main line for the bathroom and route it around the house? To our knowledge the Kitchen, HVAC drain, and hall bathroom are on the main septic line. Our clothes washer is presumably plumed to this line, but it was already diverted as grey water when we moved in. We have had no issue with the kitchen waste line and the HVAC drain has been fine since the line was jet cleaned. Even when the bathroom clogs, the kitchen/HVAC are fine.
Presumably to reroute we would need to plug/cap the waste line distal to where the sink/shower/toilet all meet. The toilet is against the exterior wall. We would somehow divert from there down below the footer or through the concrete footer (concrete slab foundation) and then trench around to the septic tank.
To sum up, is this possible? If so, is it ok to punch through the concrete footer to ensure proper slope for the waste pipe? How would I cap the cast iron pipe and would I likely need to demo the bathroom to do it? The sink drain line heads toward the toilet (exterior wall/not toward main line) Have no idea where the shower drains. As an added note, we are outside the city and have no permits/inspectors/HOA.
Brown= septic tanks (we have two)
Red lines= assumed course of current cast iron sewage line
Blue lines = proposed route of bypass line