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- 31 Oct 2019
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Hi, I'm after some 2nd (qualified or non-qualified) opinions on my current plumbing issue.
I have a bathroom with a really slow draining bath, a normally draining sink and a slow draining toilet where the water after flushed goes very high in the bowl.
The bath when empty, gurgles after flushing the toilet. I presume that air is being somewhat pulled from these pipes.
The toilet has a large AAV and the bath has a small AAV. Both appear in good condition.
I have a 2nd bathroom which possibly has a slightly slow draining toilet. It's not all that noticeable, but I started looking closer at how high the bowl filled after the very obvious problems in the 1st bathroom. It has it's own AAV too.
I had a plumber out to assess. After an hour and a half his advice was to purchase new AAVs for the toilet and bath, even though they look in great condition. He had no idea why these 3 separate units would all start slowly draining at exactly the same time as each other.
Surely there must be a common issue?
When we took off each of the AAVs and ran water down the toilet and the bath, we got an increase in intake of air and both went back to draining normally. This solidified the solution to the plumber that it's the AAVs that are at fault.
Plumber said he'd be pretty amazed if this was a blockage issue. My question is - wouldn't a part-blockage which is located in a commonly used pipe cause a reduction in air intake from the AAVs resulting in a slower flow of water?
Thanks for any advice/ideas!
I have a bathroom with a really slow draining bath, a normally draining sink and a slow draining toilet where the water after flushed goes very high in the bowl.
The bath when empty, gurgles after flushing the toilet. I presume that air is being somewhat pulled from these pipes.
The toilet has a large AAV and the bath has a small AAV. Both appear in good condition.
I have a 2nd bathroom which possibly has a slightly slow draining toilet. It's not all that noticeable, but I started looking closer at how high the bowl filled after the very obvious problems in the 1st bathroom. It has it's own AAV too.
I had a plumber out to assess. After an hour and a half his advice was to purchase new AAVs for the toilet and bath, even though they look in great condition. He had no idea why these 3 separate units would all start slowly draining at exactly the same time as each other.
Surely there must be a common issue?
When we took off each of the AAVs and ran water down the toilet and the bath, we got an increase in intake of air and both went back to draining normally. This solidified the solution to the plumber that it's the AAVs that are at fault.
Plumber said he'd be pretty amazed if this was a blockage issue. My question is - wouldn't a part-blockage which is located in a commonly used pipe cause a reduction in air intake from the AAVs resulting in a slower flow of water?
Thanks for any advice/ideas!