Chuck52
Veteran Member
My 45 year old house has black iron sewer pipes. All seems to be in pretty good shape, but the two-inch line that drains the kitchen sink gets plugged sometimes. Hmmmm. I wonder if could be because the wife insists on putting grease down the drain and using the garbage disposal for anything that falls in the sink.....Nah.....can't be that. Anyway, there are two clean-outs on two male-female black iron fittings stacked on top of each other right above the basement floor. The clean-out plugs are brass, and they are not coming out without dynamite. I suspect that we get problems when the melted and dissolved greasy stuff hits these joints and plates out, and then traps whatever stringy stuff the wife has just dumped down the disposal. I'm thinking about replacing these fittings and the pipe above them with PVC and a nice user friendly clean-out, but I don't know how those old black iron to black iron joints were made. Are they threaded, or did they fill the joints with putty or lead or something? I certainly don't want to damage the pipe that goes into the basement floor, so I might just cut out a section of the black iron pipe and put in some PVC. That would leave me with whatever joint is collecting the crud, but with a convenient clean-out I could live with that. At present, I get up on the roof snake down the vent, because it's a straighter shot than going through the kitchen drain, and I don't have to disconnect any fittings. Last night, that didn't do the trick, but I dumped a half gallon of Liquid Plumber down the vent and after it sat all night the snake popped the crud out this morning. While that's entertaining and all, I figure the next time will be during a blizzard or something.
Chuck
Chuck