Problem With Plumbing - Advice needed!

The soil pipe is probably between the breeze block and the plasterboard and runs down from upstairs to the lower floor and into the drains. Sometimes it is boxed in. Do they know where the issue is, or do they need to investigate? That might be the reason it is so high a quote. In my house, if the seal upstairs goes, it would need the bath taking out, and that means removing a radiator and wall tiles too. It can get messy. Let the insurance pick up the cost of fixing it if covered.

Not sure if they've scoped it to find out where the problem is before, no. Would all insurers cover this work as standard?
 
Do you live local to Manchester?

Any chance you can post a photo of the area in the bathroom and the rear of the toilet where the multi-quick is

Is the smell intermittent?
Or there all time
Have you checked under the floor for water? Is there somthing in the bathroom that's not used much,you would be surprised how many people don't use the bath or a shower if they have both in the room and the trap dries up and if it's connected internally to the svp,you will get smells and bad air coming up all the time

Don't take what the plumber said as gospel,most of them haven't got a clue about faults with drains and the svp and there's a lot of "plumbers" wandering about causing more harm than good.

Sadly it's down to yourself to put it right,caveat emptor I'm afraid

I could spend the next hour asking relevant questions about it,but unless I had a look the job,it's a bit difficult
 
Not sure if they've scoped it to find out where the problem is before, no. Would all insurers cover this work as standard?
So if it's a seal on the ground floor then you could be looking at removing worktops and cabinets, although if there's no smell in the kitchen, it's likely a problem upstairs. There should also be a water trap on the bath to stop smells up through the plug hole.
I'm not sure about the insurer, would say probably, yes.
 
So if it's a seal on the ground floor then you could be looking at removing worktops and cabinets, although if there's no smell in the kitchen, it's likely a problem upstairs. There should also be a water trap on the bath to stop smells up through the plug hole.
I'm not sure about the insurer, would say probably, yes.

That's the thing, there's no smell anywhere else but in the bathroom.
 
Behind cabinets in the kitchen. I did think it seemed expensive for the work that needs doing though.

Cheers for the advice guys, think I'll get a 2nd opinion before going ahead with it!

ok so this is more complex then as they are going to have to dismatle parts of your kitchen by the sound of things. Have you asked them to break the costs down so you know what's being paid for. something like

remove bathroom wall (is the wall tiled extra work needed if it is)
dismantle kitchen
remove kitchen wall
fix soil pipe issue
rebuild walls
plaster
rebuild kitchen
tidy up


still nowhere near £4k worth 2 days work max.

I'd still check all the traps first and the toilet soil pipe joint. I'd also be tempted to buy a plumbers endoscope and drill a series of holes to investigate the pipe to see it there the problem is beforehand.
 
Ah fuck.......I thought one of the Bluemoon ladies had started a thread.
 

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