Home & Garden31 mins ago
Smelly bathroom sink
18 Answers
I have just moved into an apartment and the en suite basin sink smells very musty. I did remove a hair ball an thought that would solve the problem but although the water drains away very quickly the smell persists. I have tried soda crystals and a product called Buster plughole cleaner but they have not made any difference. Can anyone recommend a product that would help.
Thanks in advance
Thanks in advance
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by geordiegirl1. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Very often it is not the plughole bit that causes the smell but the overflow. The bit where water can run away before the sink overflows. Try squirting some bleach or lavatory cleaner (use lots to make sure you cover the whole if the inside) leave it for a while, then fill the sink to wash it away. Repeat if necessary. Give a post if it works - did for me.
Has the apartment been out of use for a while? this can make the drains smell until its all had a good flush. I would try boiling kettles of water without any chemical. If it is possible to put the plug in with a string tied to it, fill the sink with boiling water till its going down the overflow, keep filling slowly so the overflow gets a good rinse, then pull out the plug with the string. You might need to repeat this a few times.
Failing that, is it rented? I would get in touch with the landlord.
Failing that, is it rented? I would get in touch with the landlord.
Maybe bacteria build up if things like soap and more goopy stuff has been used which is not washing down the pipes and building up. What unblocker did you use, was it a liquid one? Maybe try a foam one which might take more persistent things stuck in the pipes then follow it down with some strong antibacterial detergent once washed through.
You say the water runs away quickly therefore it sounds as though the waste is clear and unlikely to be the cause of the offending odour.
But personally I would still take the u-bend apart and clean it out.Get yourself a a bottle cleaner (one of those twisted wire things, with long bristles) and scrub through the overflow opening, and down through the plug hole.. You will be surprised what can lurk in there. Dont forget to flush it through.
Watch out for the plughole slime ... it will flick everywhere..!
Have you checked under the sink just in case you have a waste pipe leak. If that were to get onto a carpet or under vinyl, it will cause a musky smell.
But personally I would still take the u-bend apart and clean it out.Get yourself a a bottle cleaner (one of those twisted wire things, with long bristles) and scrub through the overflow opening, and down through the plug hole.. You will be surprised what can lurk in there. Dont forget to flush it through.
Watch out for the plughole slime ... it will flick everywhere..!
Have you checked under the sink just in case you have a waste pipe leak. If that were to get onto a carpet or under vinyl, it will cause a musky smell.
If you have done all the useful things folks have suggested, then it is not the residues in the trap that are smelling, it is because the water is being syphoned out of the U-trap. When this happens, there is an air corridor between the smells of the sewer below (often many metres away) and the drain smell permeates into the room. It often seems worse when you put the extractor fan on - because more smelly air gets drawn out of the drain from below.
The reasons are manyfold (poor design often), so contact your landlord
The reasons are manyfold (poor design often), so contact your landlord
To add to what BM says. If you've ruled out leaks and blockages, then it certainly sounds like syphoning.
Wastes are often connected up in strange, inefficient ways. To overcome it, you might need an anti-syphon trap fitted to the basin. Right now you may have a standard bottle trap, or even an old fashioned U-bend called a P-trap.(Shaped like a letter P).
Alternatively, you could fit an inline "air admittance valve". Cheap and easy to fit. It allows air in to avoid syphoning, but doesn't let smells out.
Wastes are often connected up in strange, inefficient ways. To overcome it, you might need an anti-syphon trap fitted to the basin. Right now you may have a standard bottle trap, or even an old fashioned U-bend called a P-trap.(Shaped like a letter P).
Alternatively, you could fit an inline "air admittance valve". Cheap and easy to fit. It allows air in to avoid syphoning, but doesn't let smells out.
-- answer removed --