Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like sewer gas coming out of sink drains?
Yes. Maybe have a plumber check the new bathroom drains to make sure that the proper S drains have been used.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like sewer gas coming out of sink drains?
Anonymous wrote:Demonic presence
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had a dry p trap in the drain under our washing machine, and every night at 8 ish my kids would shower and the exhaust in the bathroom would create the negative pressure and the smell would emanate. Super annoying bc that drain is hard to access due to the pan under the machine, but we got a tube that I now keep in the drain that I can funnel water through.
Filling the trap with mineral oil will keep it from drying out.
That's for unused traps, not on affected by a vacuum.
If there's a vacuum in your drains they're not vented properly.
That is only one cause for a vacuum.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had a dry p trap in the drain under our washing machine, and every night at 8 ish my kids would shower and the exhaust in the bathroom would create the negative pressure and the smell would emanate. Super annoying bc that drain is hard to access due to the pan under the machine, but we got a tube that I now keep in the drain that I can funnel water through.
Filling the trap with mineral oil will keep it from drying out.
That's for unused traps, not on affected by a vacuum.
If there's a vacuum in your drains they're not vented properly.
Anonymous wrote:In our case, our contractor forgot to cap one of the pipes behind the bathroom sink. Every time the toilet flushed, there was a blast of sewer gas.
If you've recently renovated, consider something like that. But again, you need to figure out why it happens with such timely predictability.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had a dry p trap in the drain under our washing machine, and every night at 8 ish my kids would shower and the exhaust in the bathroom would create the negative pressure and the smell would emanate. Super annoying bc that drain is hard to access due to the pan under the machine, but we got a tube that I now keep in the drain that I can funnel water through.
Filling the trap with mineral oil will keep it from drying out.
That's for unused traps, not on affected by a vacuum.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had a dry p trap in the drain under our washing machine, and every night at 8 ish my kids would shower and the exhaust in the bathroom would create the negative pressure and the smell would emanate. Super annoying bc that drain is hard to access due to the pan under the machine, but we got a tube that I now keep in the drain that I can funnel water through.
Filling the trap with mineral oil will keep it from drying out.
Anonymous wrote:We had a dry p trap in the drain under our washing machine, and every night at 8 ish my kids would shower and the exhaust in the bathroom would create the negative pressure and the smell would emanate. Super annoying bc that drain is hard to access due to the pan under the machine, but we got a tube that I now keep in the drain that I can funnel water through.
Anonymous wrote:We had a dry p trap in the drain under our washing machine, and every night at 8 ish my kids would shower and the exhaust in the bathroom would create the negative pressure and the smell would emanate. Super annoying bc that drain is hard to access due to the pan under the machine, but we got a tube that I now keep in the drain that I can funnel water through.