Hello all,
I have potentially a two-part question:
1) My kitchen garbage disposal (which, as best as I can tell is ~12 years old; it was there when I moved in) has started leaking. The odd thing is that the water is leaking out from under the bottom of the disposal. When I run water into the drain drips of water come out from all possible holes on the bottom of the disposal (the electrical access panel, the reset button, etc.) Given this, I'm assuming this means there's some sort of leak within my disposal unit, which I'm thinking there isn't really an easy way to fix. I was wondering if people had thoughts on that. (After I took the picture below I disconnected the electrical line to the disposal to avoid any further water/electricity mixes.)
2) Assuming that I do need a new disposal, I wanted to point out that I'm in Illinois, and for some reason our great non-corrupt public servants have decided that it is illegal in Illinois to connect a dishwasher to a garbage disposal. Specifically, section 890.770 of the IL plumbing code reads:
"When a domestic dishwashing machine drain line is connected to the house side of a trap from a sink, the drain from the dishwasher shall be carried up to the underside of the spill rim of the sink. Dishwashing machines shall discharge separately into a trap or tail piece of the kitchen sink and shall not connect to the food waste disposal unit."
Whomever put in the disposal originally ignored that rule (see attached picture of under my sink). So I'm thinking that if I'm going to replace the disposal I might as well connect everything up correctly. So:
Subquestion 2a) Does that mean that the dishwasher disposal should connect into the black piece of PVC between the disposal and the white trap? Is that possible if I buy some sort of new branching connector?
Subquestion 2b) Is that piece of flexible accordion-like hose that connects the trap to the drain pipe up to code? I haven't been able to get a solid answer on that. I understand why the previous people used it as the drainpipe (which you can't quite see in the picture) sticks really far under the sink, so space is tight between the end of the drain pipe and the side of the disposal unit.
Under my sink:
Any thoughts or suggestions are much appreciated.
Thanks!
Q
I have potentially a two-part question:
1) My kitchen garbage disposal (which, as best as I can tell is ~12 years old; it was there when I moved in) has started leaking. The odd thing is that the water is leaking out from under the bottom of the disposal. When I run water into the drain drips of water come out from all possible holes on the bottom of the disposal (the electrical access panel, the reset button, etc.) Given this, I'm assuming this means there's some sort of leak within my disposal unit, which I'm thinking there isn't really an easy way to fix. I was wondering if people had thoughts on that. (After I took the picture below I disconnected the electrical line to the disposal to avoid any further water/electricity mixes.)
2) Assuming that I do need a new disposal, I wanted to point out that I'm in Illinois, and for some reason our great non-corrupt public servants have decided that it is illegal in Illinois to connect a dishwasher to a garbage disposal. Specifically, section 890.770 of the IL plumbing code reads:
"When a domestic dishwashing machine drain line is connected to the house side of a trap from a sink, the drain from the dishwasher shall be carried up to the underside of the spill rim of the sink. Dishwashing machines shall discharge separately into a trap or tail piece of the kitchen sink and shall not connect to the food waste disposal unit."
Whomever put in the disposal originally ignored that rule (see attached picture of under my sink). So I'm thinking that if I'm going to replace the disposal I might as well connect everything up correctly. So:
Subquestion 2a) Does that mean that the dishwasher disposal should connect into the black piece of PVC between the disposal and the white trap? Is that possible if I buy some sort of new branching connector?
Subquestion 2b) Is that piece of flexible accordion-like hose that connects the trap to the drain pipe up to code? I haven't been able to get a solid answer on that. I understand why the previous people used it as the drainpipe (which you can't quite see in the picture) sticks really far under the sink, so space is tight between the end of the drain pipe and the side of the disposal unit.
Under my sink:

Any thoughts or suggestions are much appreciated.
Thanks!
Q