Rodo rooter or however they spell it has that camera.  Or if you want to buy 
one yourself Ridgid sells a good one.  You could get a plumber to fix the 
problem for less but you'll be the only one on the block with a sewer camera...
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: rs_denis 
  To: blindhandyman@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Wednesday, April 30, 2008 2:46 PM
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] I am back and have a sewer line problem.


  Seems I remember a plumber with a camera gizmo that ran into the sewer line 
and would find the block and indicate where the thing was when it found it. 
Can't remember what it was called or whether it was a national plumbing company 
or a local one that talked about this device. Might call around and see if 
anyone knows what I'm talking about. (I rarely do.)
  RD
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jennifer Jackson 
  To: blindhandyman@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Wednesday, April 30, 2008 1:52 PM
  Subject: [BlindHandyMan] I am back and have a sewer line problem.

  Hey Guys,

  Please do not take this badly, :) but I am back because of a desperate 
problem that I know you all can help me with. Even if that help is have a drink 
and call the plumber. :) I noticed some new names in the digest, so I will take 
just a moment to introduce myself and then get right to my sewer problem.

  I am Jennifer and I live in Oklahoma with my three young sons and my husband. 
I am not very handy, but have learned so much from this list in the past and 
gained a lot of confidence about what I can do myself.

  Ok, here we go with the sewer line. I have a partial block. Enough of a block 
that my washing machine and dishwasher back up and send water over flowing out 
of the half bath there by the laundry room. As you can imagine this does not 
make me very happy, though my floors are looking extra clean these days from 
the bleach water and other detergents. :) We tried some nasty chemicals and the 
snake on the line and no luck. It turns out that we do not have a ground level 
clean out for the plumbers to use so our home warranty is not going to cover 
this either.

  So now we are trying to install the ground level clean out, but we can not 
find the sewer line. We have a clean out just outside the kitchen sink on the 
wall of the house and the plumber said that most likely our sewer line will run 
straight out from there. There is about ten feet of concrete between the house 
and the yard though and we have been told that may mean it is as much as four 
to six feet deep that far out. We had the electric and what not lines marked 
and have a pretty narrow window to dig in to find this stupid line. We are now 
just over four and a half feet down and into hard packed clay. Should we try 
widening the trench before we go deeper? Any other tips or suggestions? 

  Jennifer

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