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Back in the day, cast iron piping was commonly used by plumbing contractors who didn’t foresee the rust, cracks and leaks that inevitably occurred. Imagine raw sewage pooling under your home. The standard remedy was to dig through floors and excavate and replace the corroded pipes, to the tune of tens of thousands of dollars. On top of that, the family had to leave the house while the work was being done.
John Walters has a better solution for those residential and commercial property owners with corroded cast iron sewer lines. It’s called Trenchless Sewer Line Repairs and the process is far simpler, faster and cheaper than the traditional dig-and-replace method.
According to Walters, the trenchless sewer line repair process involves the installation of a new sewer line inside the existing line. “It’s an ingenious solution whereby we feed an epoxy-saturated lining through the existing drain line, which we have flushed and prepared ahead of time,” he explains. “The inner lining is left to cure, forming a hard, impermeable lining that completely seals leaks and restores the sewer line’s integrity.”
For a plumbing contractor to replace a corroded and leaking cast iron sewer line in a home, the cost may reach $60,000-$100,000. Floors must be cut, trenches dug, pipes replaced and then new flooring installed.
Walters’ Trenchless Sewer Line Repairs, by comparison, can come in and repair the lines without having to cut floors, at a price tag of $10,000-$20,000, on average. And the home or commercial building can continue to be occupied during the process.
Founded in 1997, Trenchless Sewer Line Repairs has developed a reputation for offering a fast, clean and reliable service, which includes 24-hour emergency sewer repair, leak detection, and a variety of hoses capable of jetting out debris from pipes.
“Another important service we provide are video inspections of pipes using flexible fiber optic cables with cameras which can turn corners and provide real time images of the sewer line,” says Walters. “These videos can be saved and provided as evidence to the property owner’s insurance company.”
Walters also offers a service called Drainfield Rejuvenation, which is an alternative to having a new drainfield installed, which can cost up to $20,000. Walters and his team can use a compressor to blow air into the system, thereby creating new pathways and allowing water to flow again. The cost is an affordable $2,500-$3,000 and only minimal digging is involved.
For more information about Trenchless Sewer Line Repairs, please call John Walters at 786-322-4600 or visit www.trenchless-repairs.com.
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