Plumbing advice needed...

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jjfj80

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Joined
Jul 12, 2008
Threads
13
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Location
Oklahoma City
My washer wasn't draining, and a plumber couldn't snake it out.
The drain stack is/was galvanized pipe, going into a cast iron J-trap and cast iron drain.
Plumber quoted me a minimum of 500.00 to fix it.
My house was built in the 30's, and the addition where the washer is was put on in the mid-50's.
The thing is, this drain isn't vented. While I'm in there, must I add a vent?
This thing's been working fine for 50+ years.
I'm planning on replacing the J-trap on up with PVC,
and using a rubber coupling to join the cast iron drain to the PVC.
 
Last edited:
Thought a pic might help. I rented a 20 lb jack-hammer at
Home Depot this morning. Black goo oozed out of the bottom
of the old trap.
drain 005.webp
 
Cut the cast iron at the old leak , use a rubber coupler then install a Y to make a cleanout with a cap so you can clean out going toward the cast iron(you know that its about a 1/2" inside by now 50 60 years later) toss in a "P" trap and up to the washer . how far away is the vent stack away ? I wouldnt worry too much about a vent
 
I'm in the process of cutting the cast iron just to the left of the
old leak. If there's room, I'll put in the "Y" cleanout. I think there is.
I cut a hole in the floor under the washer to avoid a 50 foot crawl under the house.

Thanks for the input.
 
No need for a vent stack - just throw in a AAV under the sink and you should be good. Might keep from siphoning the trap at least.
 
Like Koffer said the distance is the thing to worry about for venting. If it's a 2" line and the trap less than 8 ft from the main line than you don't need a vent. I wouldn't put the trap back in the slab, just stub the line up and put the trap above the floor.
 
I would also put a cleanout tee with threaded cap in the stack marked "galvanized washer drain". It would then be easy to snake the trap in the future.
 
looks good but I would have used a Y fitting and then a 45deg as its a bitch to run a snake that far thru that one but its way better then what you had
yfitting.webp
 
I saw the "Y's" when I was getting fittings this morning, but it didn't dawn on me to add a 45. Everything is glued, and no leaks.
I feel a lot better about having PVC down there, sooo much easier to fix. And I've got an access panel under the washer.
Now we've got a buttload of laundry to do.
 

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