Backwater Valve Installation

Backwater Valve Installation: First Thing To Do To Protect Your Home From Sewage Backup

Your backwater valve should ideally be installed below the basement floor, near your house’s main sanitary service. So what happens in your basement when raw sewage starts bubbling up or gurgling through the floor drains? But have you ever considered what steps you must take to protect your property from these flooding threats? If you are a homeowner, you most definitely have pride in what you do to maintain your home from unanticipated events. However, most homeowners don’t consider fixing their plumbing system until a flood or wastewater rises to the floor and destroys the house.

It is also capable of seriously damaging your health and your house. That is why a backwater valve is a good investment: to prevent this. Adding a backwater valve is a bonus that gives you peace of mind that your house is safe and the water problem has been corrected. "Removing wastewater is a necessity."

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The Value of Backwater Valve Installation

Prevents Sewage Backup: They are necessary to protect your family and property from potential health risks during heavy rains or when flooding occurs.

Preserves Property Value: A backwater valve adds value to your home by safeguarding against water damage and structural issues caused by sewage backflows.

Regulatory Compliance: Local building codes require Backwater valve sponsor installations in many jurisdictions to prevent home damage due to sewer system pipe failures or to prevent disaster following power outages during heavy rainstorms/flooding.

Cost-Effective Solution: While the upfront investment can seem costly, the amount saved in time, money, and energy, never having to restore your home from water damage, drastically outweighs these costs.

Insurance Benefits: Some insurance companies offer homeowners discounts if they install these devices, as they are great at preventing future water damage claims.

Community Safety: Backwater valve installations help reduce the incidents directly affecting dozens of properties and overall safety and resiliency of their community’s system.

Backwater Valve Repair

If you notice a sewage odor in your basement, yet have already added a backwater valve, your sewage backflow valve might need to be repaired. This foul odor may indicate contaminated water entering your home because your main sewer line is backed up. Backwater valves generally have different expected lifespans based on various factors, such as the quality of the materials they are made of, how frequently they are maintained, and how much usage and abuse they must handle. A backwater valve in good working order should last between five and twenty years.

Your backwater valve will need to be repaired or changed more often if it was installed poorly, flooding occurs, rains are heavier than normal, it is used more often, or the material used was poor quality.

Homeowners can confidently believe their backwater valve repairs are in capable hands with professionals like Blueflow Plumbing and Drain. The experienced professionals at the Blueflow Team understand how vital an operational backwater valve is in preventing flooding damage and sewage overflow. Whether the valve no longer functions due to wear and tear, clogging, or mechanism failure, our technicians can troubleshoot the issue properly and render proven and reliable valve repair services.

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