It is of utmost importance that the drainage system in any home or business in Aurora operates without a hitch. The types of drain repairs needed can run the gamut—from barely noticeable to almost catastrophic issues in dire need of attention. When clogs occur, you might find that a simple cleaning suffices or that the problem requires much more involved troubleshooting. If you're having frequent draining problems or discernibly serious ones, the best way to go about diagnosing the issue is with video inspection. Not only does it reveal the nature of the problem, if there is one, but it also helps the inspector pinpoint the location along the pipes that need attention.
When you have drainage problems, it can sometimes be difficult to determine the exact cause. One possibility is that the drainage pipes themselves are damaged. This can occur in various ways, but for the sake of simplicity, let's divide it into two main categories: the pipes are either cracked or offset (which means that one section of the pipe is not aligned with the adjacent section). Both of these problems can potentially be fixed using more traditional methods, but which method a professional chooses may depend on how they like to work and how much they want to disrupt your life by digging trenches. All of this is to say that if your pipes are damaged, fix them. If they need to be fixed with trenching, that's a last resort. Excavating can be expensive, will disrupt landscaping, and just takes a long time.
Drainage issues may also stem from faulty sewer lines that need drain repair. Blocked sewer lines can produce odors that curl the hair of any plumber worth their salt. Slow drainage, or even flooding, can also be symptoms of sewer line problems—just ask the owner of a certain house in Aurora that in 2014 was discovered to have a sewer line that had partially collapsed. That unfortunate situation can't be blamed on the camels or their handlers. Yet, it seems, sewer lines can and do perform poorly without the aid of destructive floods or rampaging wildlife.
Fortunately, hydro jetting, which shoots a powerful jet of water through the pipes, can unclog them without leaving the kind of trail behind that a wily coyote would be proud of.