Cartoon Network

08 November 2011

Re: [DIY] Re: Natural gas or sewer smell?

 

Are you in the country or city?

I actually did ask the gas company technician after inspection if he had any plumber recommendations and he said he wasn't allowed to offer that advice.

On Mon, Nov 7, 2011 at 9:03 PM, Bill Chmelik <Chmelik@earthlink.net> wrote:
 

Depends on what kind of pipe it is and what condition it is in, but I will say the 2700 sounds awful expensive, the gas company installed a tank, ran 30 feet of line, put in 2 regulators, hook up and re-jetted the stove for 280 bucks at my house, no concrete to break up though.

                I would call another plumber, ask the gas company who they would use if it were their house.

ck

 

From: DoIt_Yourself@yahoogroups.com [mailto:DoIt_Yourself@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of subprong
Sent: Monday, November 07, 2011 8:42 PM
To: DoIt_Yourself@yahoogroups.com


Subject: Re: [DIY] Re: Natural gas or sewer smell?

 



Is it possible for a plumber to fix or patch a gas line leak without having to replace the entire pipe?

What do you think about this price?  Replacing a 40' or so run of pipe underground (having to cut up concrete to dig the trench line but only filling it back in with dirt and not fresh concrete or gravel after the pipe has been install).  This should include pressure tests and inspection costs.  $2700?

On Sun, Nov 6, 2011 at 3:00 PM, subprong <subprong@gmail.com> wrote:

Yep.  Gas leak. 5%.  Underground.  On my side, so need to call a plumber for a fix.  :(

 

 





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