Quaffer
Silver Member
How are you going to do that?pumping smoke down the roof vent
How are you going to do that?pumping smoke down the roof vent
Hey, it's your septic system......and your odor. Good luck!Haven't read the rest of the posts below this post, but many folks are telling me something similar - that it shouldn't need pumped for a long time if ever.
Check your vent pipe(s) on the roof. If they do not extend high enough, are partially blocked, or are being air locked by prevailing wind or improper plumbing in the walls, you will get the periodic smell you are experiencing.When we had our cabin built, they placed a 300 gallon septic tank about 15' from the front door.
That was in 2017. Over the years, maybe even the beginning, we smelled sewer off and on. We could never figure out if it was the vent pipe on top of the roof, the outlet pipe which is open air dumped about 100' away, the cleanout, or the lid not being airtight. The smell has gotten worse over time and I'm at a loss.
I ordered some plumbing smoke bombs that I plan to force smoke from the roof vent down and see if I can tell where the leak is. The lid doesn't seem tight all the way around the tank, or riser, I'm not sure what's there as I haven't opened the lid up yet.
Thoughts? I heard baking soda will nuetralize some of the odor if I can get the ph in the tank corrent.
I have a plumber on standby but wanted to see if I can locate the source of the leak first. What else should I check?
It sounds like the OP has just a small hunting type cabin. I doubt there is any of these appliances there.Three things I advise not to feed esp into an 'undersized' septic are:
1) Kitchen grinder. Too much organic material to digest.
2) Dishwasher. No-touch cleaning agents are strong and kill off both aerobic and anaerobic bacteria.
3) Clothes washer. It's gray water, not sewage. Detergents and o'all volume can be a bit much there too and push yuk into the field.