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Top five leading causes of slab leak repair

Leaking plumbing is never a good thing. If you've noticed water pooling around your home or business, it's important to find the source of the leak as soon as possible. While there are several different causes for slab leaks, they can easily be fixed slab leak by an experienced plumber. A slab leak occurs when there is a crack in the pipe that runs underneath your foundation or garage floor; this type of issue generally requires professional assistance with repairs to ensure everything works properly again afterwards. 





Letting these types of issues go untreated will lead to more damage down the road and cause extensive problems with your plumbing system in general; water leaking out from underneath your foundation can break up soil and even affect nearby utilities like gas lines, electrical wiring, etc


No matter how well a slab-on-grade foundation is sloped to allow for drainage, no slab is immune to slab leak repairs. Water always seeks the lowest place. As it infiltrates under your house, it has many places where it can enter. It's easy to forget about all of those little holes inside your wall cavities that are supposed to protect you from outside moisture. If even one of these openings gets blocked by wood or drywall, water flows right through them into your home and starts causing major damage.


Top leading causes of slab leak repair


1) Failed supply line : Your supply line may have failed because you called a plumber who either didn't know what he was doing, or really didn't care if he did the job right. Supply lines are supposed to be installed so that they have enough slope on the way out of your slab, so water can flow easily away from their connection outside through any nearby drain tile. When the joints in supply lines fail, you get slab leaks near your meter or on both sides of it if they pulled a loop in the line before they buried it.


You can't tell by looking at it or in most cases, even feeling it with your hand whether a supply line is leaking.


2) Failed slab : What slab are you talking about? Did they pour the slab over something that wasn't sloped enough to drain properly? Or did they install footings so close together that no matter how deep they poured the slab, the groundwater just couldn't move away from it? Your slab doesn't have to be less than 3 inches thick to fail. Many businesses build homes on slabs that are only 2 inches thick and then expect them not to leak for 50 years!


3) Failed footing : If someone installed your slab-on-grade foundation on undrained fill (not every type of fill is drained naturally in just a few years), then slab leaks are common. Fortunately, if you know it's filled with undrained fill, you can drill holes down through the slab to drain it and stop slab leak repairs.


4) Failed drain tile : Drain tile is supposed to keep water away from your foundation walls (and usually out of your basement). So, if no one backfilled behind your drain tile or put enough drainage media under its outer edge when they installed the concrete slab above it over undrained fill, then you're going to get flooded by groundwater and need to repair a slab leak. And since it doesn't matter how good the rest of the slab is, if there's an opening for any reason between two pieces of concrete that are supposed to be touching, slab leaks will happen.





5) Failed sill seal : In some cases, slab leak repairs may not be necessary because the slab has a drain tile system in it that's supposed to keep water away from your slab and foundation walls. But if someone didn't put a sill seal between where your slab meets your house, no matter how good the slope of the floor is for drainage, you'll have slab leaks when water runs under your slab and gets all up against those unfinished basement walls that were exposed when they removed the old wood-framed wall covering to put in drywall!


I was reading this article about slab leak repairs and realized that there are all different types of slab leaks. The slab on grade foundation is one of the most common slab leaks because it's used often in construction, but there are other types as well. I've had clients with tuck-pointed brick houses call me to come check out slab leaks under them before. Then I found a client who has a home built over an independent garage with an apartment space above it so she has two slabs, one for her house and one for the garage/apartment area next to it separated by a concrete wall which is the exterior basement wall of her house.


Conclusion : 


The leading cause of slab leak repair is a broken pipe. In cases where the water pressure inside your home increases, this could be an indicator that there’s a problem with one or more pipes in your plumbing system. Another common reason for slab leaks are trees and roots growing under slabs, causing them to break from underneath. Other times, it can be as simple as forgetting to turn off the kitchen sink before leaving on vacation! If you have any questions about what might be happening at your house, don't hesitate to call EZ Plumbing & Restoration today so we can help assess the situation and provide suggestions for how to fix it quickly.


Author Bio:- Aimee Grace

 

Aimee is a marketing manager at EZ Plumbing & Restoration. She is very passionate in writing about discrete plumbing services and leakage detection as well as repair solutions.  Her vision is to educate people about the consequences of water and slab leaks at home or office and what they should do to repair them to avoid further water damage as well as property damage. 

 

Innovations have paved a way for smart devices to lead a convenient life. Plumbing industry is no different but only few people know about various tools used to fix the leakages. Stay tuned with the recent articles to know all about how to find water damage, slab leak, clogging, and ways to repair them, installation of new HVAC appliances in San Diego.



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