Mad Plumber
Mad Skills
I am building a house. I made a change in location and now my septic tank inlet is 4"-8" above my commode drain. Would a pressure flush toilet help?
Mike W
Mike W
I am building a house. I made a change in location and now my septic tank inlet is 4"-8" above my commode drain. Would a pressure flush toilet help?
Mike W
That would be a gravity line, properly pitched. Not a forced main.
A forced main has to be below the frost line or it will freeze.
I made a change in location and now my septic tank inlet is 4"-8" above my commode drain ...
Plumbers screw up as well. In one job I had my licensed plumber:Perhaps this question belongs in the "Why is Everyone a Plumber" section. You don't suppose this is a DIY construction job with no permits and/or inspections?
Did he know you intended to use that floor drain for a shower, and if so, why wasn't it a shower drain fitting? Why wasn't the main valve where it came into the building in the shower? Did you specify a PRV, did he know the pressure when he bid the project, does your area specify a PRV for all new work? If none of these apply why would he "donate" a PRV to your job.
My GC hired him. They are one of the largest subs in the area, and they came recommended by a guy he went to college with and now works for an adjacent county, head of maintenance for the schools. That's how we hired the framer and concrete guy, and they were excellent.sounds like someone who doesn't care or doesn't know how to read prints.
what was it that made you hire them in the first place?
This is awkward, but...
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