It probably will not be expensive. Since you have a basement, your septic plumbing should run across the wall, somewhere between 3 feet and 4 feet off the floor. Cheapest would be to locate your setup on that wall. An access has to be made into the sewer pipe (there may already be a clean-out in a handy spot, or a tee will have to be installed), and a trap with a vertical pipe installed. Then your drain hose hangs in the pipe. There also should be hot and cold water lines in your basement - you need to tee into them and provide shutoff valves mounted on the wall. You will need a vent hole to the outside for the dryer. If your dryer is gas, you will need to extend that pipe to this area and provide a shutoff for it also. You will need dedicated electrical outlets for the washer and dryer provided in this area. I do my own work, but you may need to hire a plumber, an electrician and a handyperson to do the vent and gas hookup. Only if your septic is too high off the floor will you need a pump.
2006-09-03 14:43:53
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answer #1
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answered by Don 4
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this can be costly, depends on yoUr house layout, and where ur pipes run at the moment , however it shouldn't be excessive i suggest u get several quotes and u will be sUrprised how little that amount of work costs.
as for the pump u will only need one if the sewer outside is at a higher level than ur basement, if not then u will need to bore a hole into the basement wall and connect onto the sewer outside, so it may well be cheaper to install the pump.
2006-09-03 14:31:44
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answer #2
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answered by stephen488@btinternet.com 2
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The scent isn't the undertaking, purely a results of a undertaking. look for any leaks around the bathroom, ascertain there's a seize contained in the line from the bathing device to the sewer line and a seize below the sink. If lacking get them put in. If no longer able to discover and fasten the undertaking, that's time for a plumber. you're able to problem approximately an infection.
2016-09-30 07:49:22
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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WHY??? My washer/dryer are in the musty old basement now and I'd give about anything to get them on the 1st floor. If you are young, going up & down the stairs is no big deal, but trust me, you won't like doing it when you are over 50 years old. If your house is 2 story, put it upstairs where all the bedrooms are. that is where most of the laundry starts and goes back to when it's clean -
2006-09-03 14:31:56
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answer #4
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answered by M J 3
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We did the same thing....much nicer and much more practical....turn the laundry room into a mudroom....works for us...didnt cost us too much as we had a rough in washroom in the basement only had to move the gas line downstairs as we have a gas dryer....it was worth it though...I have tons of space now to fold....etc.... and its not so noisy. Think of all the extra exercise you'll get taking the laundry up and down the stairs...!!
2006-09-03 16:16:45
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answer #5
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answered by Lynne B 4
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if your main plumbing stack is there, you can pipe into that.
If you have an electric dryer, you have to have the proper 220v recept. installed.
you may need to run some gas line if your furnace already has gas supplied to it.
the water lines, both hot and cold, should be down there if the hot water heater is there, too.
running those lines should not be too costly.
2006-09-03 14:26:42
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Once you get the estimate.. you will jump out the window.. It will be very expensive to redo the pipes to the basement.
2006-09-03 14:30:12
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Leave it where it is. It's costly and makes a mess.
2006-09-03 16:21:59
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answer #8
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answered by whataboutme 5
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I think it would be too much of a hasle. Plus basements usually have rats and mice and all other "animals.."...
2006-09-03 14:28:57
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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trust me you dont want to be luging that stuff up & down those stairs!!!
2006-09-03 14:25:50
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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