I went with the "ball of bread" trick and it worked like a charm. Highly recommend it to anyone with my same dilemma.
I went with the "ball of bread" trick and it worked like a charm. Highly recommend it to anyone with my same dilemma.
Hopefully that fizzing noise is not the gas line, although my gas bill is usually 13 bucks a month (only pool heater and dryer use gas on the whole property).Depending on the leak type, a clamp or other seal may work.
The sound implies it is under pressure. Odd if the pump is off. No water lines in that area?
I don't smell anything, other than that odor of muddy soil - I can't get that smell out of my nose for some reason.You would hopefully smell a gas leak. The odorants added to the gas are very strong.
what does that mean if that's the case?The fizzing might be air getting sucked in while the pump is off.
Listen closely while someone turns the pump on and then off.
It's still a leak.what does that mean if that's the case?
There is a pine tree (not from my property) about 20 feet away, but those are not pine tree roots. Pine tree roots are the size of baseball bats. Outside of that, there is nothing around, but I assume there used to be something planted long ago near the heater, which is that area, because we found those sleeves nearby.That ground is really saturated and there are roots everywhere. Are there plants nearby? It must have been leaking for a long time. I know when we dug up our main line we had roots wrapped around the faulty patch (the sewer line runs close to it too). There are two mulberry trees about 30ft away from the area and their roots went straight for the moisture.
I'm actually wrong. There is a tree on the other side of the wall, about 5 feet away.That ground is really saturated and there are roots everywhere. Are there plants nearby? It must have been leaking for a long time. I know when we dug up our main line we had roots wrapped around the faulty patch (the sewer line runs close to it too). There are two mulberry trees about 30ft away from the area and their roots went straight for the moisture.
That's a pretty useful tip.There are two mulberry trees about 30ft away from the area and their roots went straight for the moisture.
That's a pretty useful tip.
To find a leak, someone could plant mulberry trees near the suspected leak location and watch which direction the roots go.
Project out the lines in the direction of the roots and use the intersection to find the leak.
Maybe I will patent the idea.
View attachment 466740
Likely:I'm actually wrong. There is a tree on the other side of the wall, about 5 feet away.
Not sure what kind of tree this is, Ive seen them often, but I believe this is as big as it gets.
View attachment 466736
I think you are 100% correct.Likely:
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Ah, so the idea is to find the leak by treeangulation.That's a pretty useful tip.
To find a leak, someone could plant mulberry trees near the suspected leak location and watch which direction the roots go.
Project out the lines in the direction of the roots and use the intersection to find the leak.
Maybe I will patent the idea.
View attachment 466838