Yahoo Answers is shutting down on May 4th, 2021 (Eastern Time) and the Yahoo Answers website is now in read-only mode. There will be no changes to other Yahoo properties or services, or your Yahoo account. You can find more information about the Yahoo Answers shutdown and how to download your data on this help page.

Plumbing issue. Odd substance backing up in garage floor drain.?

Have been in this home about 5 years, but it is a 40 year old home. There is a floor drain in the garage and occasionally a liquid forms around it. I assume it is a back up of some type, but the substance looks like water but is oily, clear in color and no odor. Anyone have any idea what is going on. Also, no cars are in the garage, used for lawn mower and storage.

11 Answers

Relevance
  • 2 years ago

    Sometimes metal pipes will "sweat" - that is, warm up and evaporate water in the air, cool off and become water to collect in a puddle, then evaporate into a gas, leaving collected solids behind. If the substance has no smell and is clear, it might not be back flow or backwash from the drain. Most floor drain pipes drain into the main sewer line, or a septic tank. However, if you DO have a septic tank and recently moved in, it may be the residue of soluble gases from the septic tank that pipe drains into, the gases evaporated into steam and went back up the drain pipe through natural air, collected outside the pipe, cooled and puddled, collecting former oil residue along the pipes as the gases moved through regular air flow. (oh goodness me, this is sounding like "wet farts", dang it.) But, really, if the septic tank was cleaned out before you moved in, the trapped gases and steam inside the tank are coming back up this pipe into the open air of your garage, only to cool and puddle near the opening. The water or regular H20 evaporates into the air, the soluble oil residue from the pipes that had collected for the previous 40 years are left behind after the water evaporates out. Because this happens quickly, mold and germs have no chance to form and grow in the fluid to make a smell. Because this pipe is acting as a vent for an underground issue, you may wish to install a Carbon monoxide sensor and alarm system in this room to measure carbon monoxide collection along the ceiling of the garage. If the garage door opens and lets fresh air in, the carbon monoxide might not build up heavy, but if the doors stay shut all through sever cold weather, having a Carbon monoxide alert in this room may be a suggestion. This is just a theory, but, good luck with finding out the real source. Do get someone to measure the gases around the pipe opening, if possible. A professional can tell you for sure what this liquid is and if it is dangerous to you.

  • 2 years ago

    i dint kno

  • 2 years ago

    snake it

  • ?
    Lv 6
    2 years ago

    It sounds like water from the clothes washer. Call a Plumber.

  • Anonymous
    2 years ago

    Maybe someone dumped motor oil in there. Wherever it drains into what? Sounds like the chances are it does not drain correctly. It probably needs a snaking .

    Or maybe it is just a pit. You need some how to pump it out. Is there a sump pump there?

  • Edwena
    Lv 7
    2 years ago

    This summer when it is dry, fill the drain line up with water and start looking for a drain line and exit to someplace. You should find a wet spot if you put enough water into the drain, and it drains. You might also pour a bottle of drain cleaner in it just to unclog things . My guess is that it is a drain line for washing the garage floor, and the line drains outside and dumps in a nearby swale. The end of the drain is grown over with vegetation and is line is now mostly plugged and water backs up from rains.

  • ?
    Lv 7
    2 years ago

    It may be connected to a soakaway which is clogging up and backflowing. I doubt if it is the main sewer or it'd smell. You might care to enter into some investigation, perhaps seeing the direction it drains in and gong outside with a shovel to try to find the pipe.

  • Joe
    Lv 7
    2 years ago

    With no smell, it's not likely to be connected to your sanitary sewer line. I might guess that it's plumbed to a dry well, or cistern of some kind, which has become contaminated.

    Any chance your home had an underground fuel oil tank in the past?

  • Anonymous
    2 years ago

    Call a plumber.

  • ?
    Lv 6
    2 years ago

    There will be a P trap under the drain. It's full of disease. Remove the cover grill, Take the garden house and wrap a rag around it big enough to fill the hole and stuff it in the drain, hose and rag. Stand on it while someone else turns the hose faucet on full and blow the drain out.

Still have questions? Get your answers by asking now.