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About speedball1
Expertise
About me: My Plumbing Expertise: I retired from plumbing after a lifetime in the trade. all phases from service and upkeep to construction, both residential and commercial. I am qualified to do anything in plumbing from fixing a leaky faucet to drafting a set of plans for a commercial shopping center and supervising the construction. My last five years were spent as a trouble shooter for a large plumbing company. I took on all my companys complaints. I have been a expert on the plumbing page at Askme.com. In a field of 200 experts my rating was number one. You may also find me at Answerway.com and AskMe Help Desk.com. This is fun for me and if I can help anybody out that`s iceing on the cake. Degrees & Certifications: As for degrees, I don`t have any. Just a Journeymans ticket, but hey! How about fifty years experience?

Experience
Life Experience? Hmmmmmmm! Ran away at 15 and joined a carnival, Navy at 17 Merchant marine at 19 I've had a hellava life.
 
   

You are here:  Experts > Home/Garden > Home Improvement/Repair > Plumbing in the Home > odor from bathroom sink drain

Plumbing in the Home - odor from bathroom sink drain


Expert: speedball1 - 3/29/2004

Question
I have a dual sink vanity in the master bath which is part of a master suite added 3 years ago (1st floor).
After about 2 months I started to get a foul smell from the drain of 1 sink staring approx. 15 seconds after the water was turned on. It continues for about 30-45 seconds and disappears. Subsequent water turn ons/offs do not cause a recurrence unless I wait about 5-10 minutes and the smell starts again.
The plumber who installed all this has come up with no solution. The vent pipe to the roof is new and clean, the trap is not being siphoned of water, the overflow tube (plastic type with this type of Corian sink) has been both cleaned and replaced, and there is an auxiliarry vent system under the other sink  as a precaution. I have used drano, vinegar, bleach, etc. and get temporary relief for 3-15 uses but the drain is not clogged. The stand alone shower and the tub  each have no drain smells when the water is used and the toilet runs fine. The alternate sink gets the problem occasionally. The sanitary line to the sewer has been cleaned.
The last plumber suggested that the drain pipe fitting to the sink's trap may be emitting an odor due to the type of plumbers putty used in installation and suggested replacing it and using silicone. This seems like a "reach" to me.
I just discovered your  web site today and after looking at your credentials, I just had to send you a message. If this stumps you ,I'm beginning to  think the bathroom may be posessed!!!
I would very much appreciate your thoughts on this. Thanks for your time in reading this.

Pat

Answer
Good morning Pat,  Tippty tap!  Tippty tap tap tap!  That's the  sound of your plumber tapdancing away from a question he had no idea of how to answer.  Plumbers putty??Nah! If it were why don't both drains smell bad ?  I'm suprised your plumber didn't tell you how bad hair buildup can smell when it starts to rot.  Hair mixed with grease from soap can get caught on the pop-up operating lever located a few inches below the stopper.  Your plumber DID pull the stoppers out and check didn't he?  If not then It's an easy job for a home owner.  Remove the stopper and shine a light down into the drain.  You will see a small rod a few inches down.  This is the rod that pushes the stopper up.  If there is hair build up down there,  fish it out.  Now pour a 1/2 gallon of bleach down there and let it sit over night.  Next morning flush it out with a pan of boiling water.  This will loosen and flush out any grease that's left and leave your drain smelling nice and clean.  Some times a plumber will tie down the stopper so it can't be pulled out.  Not to worry. Just click on back and I'll walk you through the procedure.  I never tie a stopper down on a new installation so it can't be pulled and cleaned.  Follow my instructions and we'll have that stinky drain smelling like a rose. Let me give you instructions now instead of later. Your stopper has a opening at the base that the rod goes through so that it can't be pulled out. To defeat this and pull the stopper look under the sink and follow the pop up lever down to the rod. You will see a knurled nut. Now push the pop up knob so the stopper is in the up position. While holding the stopper in one hand, slowly back the nut out untill it's clear,(You may need to free it up with a pair of pliers) Carefull! You don't want to pull it all the way out. Now, GENTLY pull back on the rod while pulling upwards on the stopper. As soon as the stopper clears STOP and turn the nut back in hand tight or tight enough to hold the plunger rod up. From here on in you will let the stopper ride on top of the rod instead of tying it down. I   Hope this helps and thank you for rating my reply.  Tom  

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