Upstairs bath sink not draining. No apparent clog either at p-trap or down line. Turned off AC to test and noticed sink starts to slowly drain. Am I getting air in the line from the AC unit via the condensate line?
I had clog 10+ feet down the line in the wall after AC guy blew out condensate line.JobSecurity said:
Clog is probably just further down the wall than you think.
I hate whoever came up with this design. If the pipe clogs the sink overflow doesn't work which means the AC fills the sink and floods your bathroom. There has to be a better way
JobSecurity said:
Clog is probably just further down the wall than you think.
I hate whoever came up with this design. If the pipe clogs the sink overflow doesn't work which means the AC fills the sink and floods your bathroom. There has to be a better way
This just happened to my MIL. The condensate drain line is tied into a sink in her guest bathroom that only gets used when company comes into town. The two adjacent bedrooms got flooded before she found it. Thousands of dollars in damage.JobSecurity said:
Clog is probably just further down the wall than you think.
I hate whoever came up with this design. If the pipe clogs the sink overflow doesn't work which means the AC fills the sink and floods your bathroom. There has to be a better way
Same, I ran a 25 ft snake down my upstairs bath sink to clear it outrme said:I had clog 10+ feet down the line in the wall after AC guy blew out condensate lineJobSecurity said:
Clog is probably just further down the wall than you think.
I hate whoever came up with this design. If the pipe clogs the sink overflow doesn't work which means the AC fills the sink and floods your bathroom. There has to be a better way