Diggin It
Super Star Member
Step out in the kitchen and notice water on the floor near the stove. I had just cooked some pasta and it boiled over a bit, so figuring it was from that, I mopped it up and moved on. Little while later, I go back in the kitchen and more water. Oh Good. Look down behind the stove (and reminded myself I need to clean back there) and I see water on the floor ... no way it came from the pasta back there. Then I notice water on the drywall.... just a bead or two that slowly dripped to the floor before another bead appeared. This can't be good.
This is a 60 year old house with a lot of problems. The roof leaked pretty bad a few years back. Putting a metal roof on stopped that. But now I'm thinking I've developed a new leak somewhere. It's raining gently, not storming but enough that it could be from that. So, I go upstairs and open the cubby hole into the attic and look around for signs of a leak. Not a drop. Bone dry.
Bathroom is on the other side of the wall from the kitchen. Go in there and open the water wall looking for a pipe leak. Nothing.
I got to find out how this drywall is getting wet. Somehow there must be water leaking behind it and it found a way to seep through a bad spot or screwhole. Pull the stove out and take a screwdriver to punch a small hole thinking water would run out. Nope. Grab a paper to wipe the wall off and see if the wet spot is close by. As I'm doing that, I feel spray. Vary faint, almost a mist. That's when I realize the line to the icemaker is right there. Hold my hand to it and sure enough, the spray. So faint I can't see it, only feel it.
This icemaker line is the plastic type and has been there nearly 20 years. I used plastic because I had copper lines leak in the past. How the hail does a 1/8" plastic line develop a pinhole leak behind the stove when it's never moved or bumped?
An hour of panic, a bathroom water wall to close back up, a hole in drywall to spackle and no line to replace the leaky one. At least it's not summer when I need ice.
Guess that trip to town I was planning for next week will get moved up to tomorrow after all.
This is a 60 year old house with a lot of problems. The roof leaked pretty bad a few years back. Putting a metal roof on stopped that. But now I'm thinking I've developed a new leak somewhere. It's raining gently, not storming but enough that it could be from that. So, I go upstairs and open the cubby hole into the attic and look around for signs of a leak. Not a drop. Bone dry.
Bathroom is on the other side of the wall from the kitchen. Go in there and open the water wall looking for a pipe leak. Nothing.
I got to find out how this drywall is getting wet. Somehow there must be water leaking behind it and it found a way to seep through a bad spot or screwhole. Pull the stove out and take a screwdriver to punch a small hole thinking water would run out. Nope. Grab a paper to wipe the wall off and see if the wet spot is close by. As I'm doing that, I feel spray. Vary faint, almost a mist. That's when I realize the line to the icemaker is right there. Hold my hand to it and sure enough, the spray. So faint I can't see it, only feel it.
This icemaker line is the plastic type and has been there nearly 20 years. I used plastic because I had copper lines leak in the past. How the hail does a 1/8" plastic line develop a pinhole leak behind the stove when it's never moved or bumped?
An hour of panic, a bathroom water wall to close back up, a hole in drywall to spackle and no line to replace the leaky one. At least it's not summer when I need ice.
Guess that trip to town I was planning for next week will get moved up to tomorrow after all.