This was mentioned in passing in a thread in another forum and I wanted to ask for advice.
The drain for my dishwasher goes nearly horizontal for a few inches in the approx. 4-inch "crawlspace" between the kitchen floor and bare dirt. before it emerges into the cellar proper and bends down into the drainpipe proper. (Kitchen addition is circa 1900 on an 1850 house, which does have a stone foundation, but cellar is unfinished.) The placement of the water intake pipes on the other side of the dishwasher avoids this, but given the only possible placement of the dishwasher in the kitchen wing, it was this or nothing for the dishwasher drain.
So of course, it freezes when the weather gets really cold -- low teens or lower -- for a stretch. I can free it up by crawling under the counter and pouring small amounts of near boiling water into it several times over the course of a day or two, but it's a pain in the neck. (This is the only problem I have with pipes freezing in this old house, the previous owners of 50 years having long ago gotten the rest of the plumbing where it needs to be to avoid freezing.)
Would pouring some windshield washer deicer fluid into the drain before the thermometer is due to take a big dive be safe to do, worth doing? I have a septic system, so I don't want to pour too much of this stuff into the drain.
Anybody ever done this?
The drain for my dishwasher goes nearly horizontal for a few inches in the approx. 4-inch "crawlspace" between the kitchen floor and bare dirt. before it emerges into the cellar proper and bends down into the drainpipe proper. (Kitchen addition is circa 1900 on an 1850 house, which does have a stone foundation, but cellar is unfinished.) The placement of the water intake pipes on the other side of the dishwasher avoids this, but given the only possible placement of the dishwasher in the kitchen wing, it was this or nothing for the dishwasher drain.
So of course, it freezes when the weather gets really cold -- low teens or lower -- for a stretch. I can free it up by crawling under the counter and pouring small amounts of near boiling water into it several times over the course of a day or two, but it's a pain in the neck. (This is the only problem I have with pipes freezing in this old house, the previous owners of 50 years having long ago gotten the rest of the plumbing where it needs to be to avoid freezing.)
Would pouring some windshield washer deicer fluid into the drain before the thermometer is due to take a big dive be safe to do, worth doing? I have a septic system, so I don't want to pour too much of this stuff into the drain.
Anybody ever done this?