All the drains in the bathroom are blocked, why is there still a smell?

Updated on Bathroom 2024-08-23
7 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    How can it be stuffed with bricks inside the pipe, there is a special cover for closing the pipe on the market. Buy as big a tube as you want. The drain is generally 50 pipes and the toilet is 110 pipes.

    You just buy two of these caps and try to lower their size when sealing. Wooden floors are leveled on the ground. At this time, the leveling is carried out so that it can be covered with cement mortar and cover.

    This way, there is no need to worry about the decoration residue falling in. It would be an absolute miracle to stuff the pipes with bricks and not block them in the future. In this way, you will affect the drainage of the people upstairs and downstairs.

  2. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    If the bathroom smells, you can install an exhaust fan in the ceiling of the bathroom, and then make a hole in the wall above the ceiling to connect it to the outside. Ventilate frequently, and maybe the smell will go away.

  3. Anonymous users2024-01-22

    Did the landlord solve it? My home before the smell of all replaced the anti-odor drain core, almost a year did not smell in the smell, recently began to smell again, at present to determine the three floor drains are not smelly, today found that the tile is a little gap I blocked with glass glue The result is still smelly, the toilet has not been moved before the new circle, and now it is almost dismantling the toilet. Sick of it.

  4. Anonymous users2024-01-21

    I'm just like you All the drains are sealed and the toilet seals are new It's useless The house still stinks I don't know what's going on Have you figured out why?

  5. Anonymous users2024-01-20

    How did you get it, it's the same problem in my house.

  6. Anonymous users2024-01-19

    Is it solved? I'm also having this problem. I couldn't find the reason when I looked for someone, and the basin was sealed.

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-18

    I have the same problem as you, ask God to solve it.

Related questions
1 answers2024-08-23

Generally, no. As long as the upstairs doesn't leak all the time, the downstairs won't seep water. Toilet floors are designed to be waterproof and drained. The general bath or something, as long as it is not a few hours of continuous drainage to the ground, can ensure that the downstairs is not seepage.

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Find the dredge of the pipe! Floor drain for anti-odor!

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Do not seal the drain, press it on the mouth with broken tiles, and then smooth it with sand and plaster, and then build on it. It's good to change it back in case you change it back in the future.

1 answers2024-08-23

Standard bricks are usually used for plugging.

Or use a wooden keel, add a cement pressure plate, and leave an access port for easy maintenance for reference. >>>More

2 answers2024-08-23

There are two ways to deal with it:

1. Caused by the infiltration of toilet sewage into the bonding layer; The mortar bonding layer around the sewage pipe is not waterproofed, because the bricks are paved with dry and hard ash, the bonding layer is not compact, and the residual water seeps into the bonding layer around the pipe root when the sewage is discharged, so it is always not dry but the amount of water is less. >>>More