I am leasing an older property and remodeling it to set up a day-spa. The property has been unoccupied and the shower drain was blocked.
The property manager sent out a plumbing company, the guy who showed up God bless him, was a young guy, with braces on his teeth. That concerned me, as a friend has told me to always try to get a guy with gray hair.
Anyway he stuck a small snake on a drill down the drain and got out a hair gunk, but said he couldn't get the snake around the turn in the p trap, due to a high degree of scaling in the old pipe.
His proposed solution was to jackhammer up the floor of the shower and replace the cast iron with plastic pipe. Obviously I would like to avoid this.
He also said he didn't want to put a jet in there because 1) he wouldn't be able to get it around the corner of the bend in the trap, and 2) it therefore might exploded the pipe. He was uninterested in trying to approach the trap from the other end via a cleanout or whatever, and even though I told him where the lateral ran, he seemed to not grasp the basic anatomy of the system.
The scaling will supposedly (and understandably) cause more clogs in the future.
I am wondering if there are any solutions to this. What's the real risk of jetting exploding the pipe? Might it be accessible on the downstream side via a cleanout? Could it be jetted from each end?
Are there any flexible wire brushes that could be ran through there to do some descaling?
Wouldn't jackhammering the floor violate the moisture barrier? And just be really expensive? The trap is down about a foot.
Thanks everyone.
The property manager sent out a plumbing company, the guy who showed up God bless him, was a young guy, with braces on his teeth. That concerned me, as a friend has told me to always try to get a guy with gray hair.
Anyway he stuck a small snake on a drill down the drain and got out a hair gunk, but said he couldn't get the snake around the turn in the p trap, due to a high degree of scaling in the old pipe.
His proposed solution was to jackhammer up the floor of the shower and replace the cast iron with plastic pipe. Obviously I would like to avoid this.
He also said he didn't want to put a jet in there because 1) he wouldn't be able to get it around the corner of the bend in the trap, and 2) it therefore might exploded the pipe. He was uninterested in trying to approach the trap from the other end via a cleanout or whatever, and even though I told him where the lateral ran, he seemed to not grasp the basic anatomy of the system.
The scaling will supposedly (and understandably) cause more clogs in the future.
I am wondering if there are any solutions to this. What's the real risk of jetting exploding the pipe? Might it be accessible on the downstream side via a cleanout? Could it be jetted from each end?
Are there any flexible wire brushes that could be ran through there to do some descaling?
Wouldn't jackhammering the floor violate the moisture barrier? And just be really expensive? The trap is down about a foot.
Thanks everyone.