Clydaho
Member
Hello,
We moved into our new house May 15, 2022. In October, the septic backed up into the shower. The builder and septic installer rushed right out and saved the day. I had put a tight cap on the only clean out, so the backed up solids from the baffle came flying out when the cap was removed. Leave the cap off. OK. And a riser was installed. Two months later I slid the top off the riser to look and make sure we weren't backing up. Solids were clogging the inlet baffle again. Hmmm. I work out of town and am gone half the time and I'm sure my wife isn't overusing the paper.
The builder came out and cut back the inlet pipe to make more room between it and the baffle. 4 weeks later, same story. Solids clogging the baffle.
Builder said to cut out the baffle. Septic installer said DO NOT remove the baffle because it will mess up the drain field.
Maybe the slope is incorrect. Hand dug the area between the house and tank. I'm attaching a picture. The slope was checked and was right on the 1/4"/foot, as recommended. Flow into the tank seemed adequate when watching after a flush.
The tank was installed in 2020 before the house was built. Plumber ran the drain pipe so it does NOT go straight into the tank. The plumbing is in the mono-slab that the house is on, so there is no moving either the pipe or the tank. There are 2 45° elbows between the house and tank.
Could this cause the solids to slow down just enough as it enters the tank so the solids stay in the baffle?
Has anyone ever dealt with an inlet line coming out of the house that doesn't go straight into the tank?
My installer has been doing this for 40 years, hasn't seen a line that doesn't go straight into the tank and hasn't seen this problem of backing up in the baffle when everything seems to be correct.
We are thinking of moving the piping back towards the house so the 45 by the tank is further from the tank and allows a 6-12" straight shot at the tank.
Thoughts???
Thanks for any help!
We moved into our new house May 15, 2022. In October, the septic backed up into the shower. The builder and septic installer rushed right out and saved the day. I had put a tight cap on the only clean out, so the backed up solids from the baffle came flying out when the cap was removed. Leave the cap off. OK. And a riser was installed. Two months later I slid the top off the riser to look and make sure we weren't backing up. Solids were clogging the inlet baffle again. Hmmm. I work out of town and am gone half the time and I'm sure my wife isn't overusing the paper.
The builder came out and cut back the inlet pipe to make more room between it and the baffle. 4 weeks later, same story. Solids clogging the baffle.
Builder said to cut out the baffle. Septic installer said DO NOT remove the baffle because it will mess up the drain field.
Maybe the slope is incorrect. Hand dug the area between the house and tank. I'm attaching a picture. The slope was checked and was right on the 1/4"/foot, as recommended. Flow into the tank seemed adequate when watching after a flush.
The tank was installed in 2020 before the house was built. Plumber ran the drain pipe so it does NOT go straight into the tank. The plumbing is in the mono-slab that the house is on, so there is no moving either the pipe or the tank. There are 2 45° elbows between the house and tank.
Could this cause the solids to slow down just enough as it enters the tank so the solids stay in the baffle?
Has anyone ever dealt with an inlet line coming out of the house that doesn't go straight into the tank?
My installer has been doing this for 40 years, hasn't seen a line that doesn't go straight into the tank and hasn't seen this problem of backing up in the baffle when everything seems to be correct.
We are thinking of moving the piping back towards the house so the 45 by the tank is further from the tank and allows a 6-12" straight shot at the tank.
Thoughts???
Thanks for any help!