Nickcgoodall
New Member
I live an a split level home. You can definitely tell that the basement was finish after the fact and that the basement bathroom was added on after the fact.
My issue: When you flush the upstairs toilet, the basement toilet bubble and shoots water 6-12 inches out of the toilet. The bathroom is not vented through the roof. It has an air admittance valve on it, 48 inches off the ground. I thought that maybe the valve was bad, so I replaced it. Did not help. However I did take off the valve to see what it would do. If there is no valve in it, no bubbles. Another thing is that this only happens during the months that I run my air conditioner. There is a floor drain that the water runs into from the furnace. Or however that works. During the non hot months, there is no water draining, so the drain is empty. From what I can tell, the bathroom plumbing and this drain meet up bc they are in the same room, but under cement, so only an educated type guess. So I know it has to do with the air flow, but how do I fix it. I’ve tried two different valves, neither work. Help!
My issue: When you flush the upstairs toilet, the basement toilet bubble and shoots water 6-12 inches out of the toilet. The bathroom is not vented through the roof. It has an air admittance valve on it, 48 inches off the ground. I thought that maybe the valve was bad, so I replaced it. Did not help. However I did take off the valve to see what it would do. If there is no valve in it, no bubbles. Another thing is that this only happens during the months that I run my air conditioner. There is a floor drain that the water runs into from the furnace. Or however that works. During the non hot months, there is no water draining, so the drain is empty. From what I can tell, the bathroom plumbing and this drain meet up bc they are in the same room, but under cement, so only an educated type guess. So I know it has to do with the air flow, but how do I fix it. I’ve tried two different valves, neither work. Help!