Plumbing – Strange suction in toilet and sink, like a vacuum in the sewer pulling the water out

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This is hard to explain.. But I was sitting in my bedroom when all of a sudden my toilet started draining, then the sinks in the bathroom started pulling air in, then when the water from the toilet drained, it started suctioning air down the toilet too. It all lasted about 20 to 30 seconds. This apparently happened a couple of weeks ago as well according to my wife.

This only happens in our new addition to the house, which has a partially separate line to the sewer (it joins up to the main line about 15 feet in front of the house). I didn't see any sign that it affected other parts of the house on the original waste water line.

My only guess is that the suction is coming from all of the water in the line draining into the sewer at once, pulling air with it until the sewer line is open to the air.

We have a tub, a toilet, a shower and two sinks on this line and none of them were in use at the time. I was seriously considering that someone was working on the sewer line outside with a vacuum or something. Any ideas what might be happening here?

UPDATED WITH PHOTOS:
Here you can see multiple vent pipes. I snaked both the close one and the far one. Time will tell if it worked
Photo of the roof above the addition, multiple vent pipes

Best Answer

Even if someone was "working on the sewer lines with a vacuum" properly sized and functional vents would keep the traps from siphoning.

So, you have vents which are not functioning as they should, whether from being built improperly in the "new addition" (since the problem is limited to there) or from some sort of blockage (animal nest in the vent pipe or the like.)

You, or, if that's not your thing, someone you hire should get up on the roof and check the vent pipe there, perhaps with a snake in hand to try cleaning it. Dumping a bucket of water down, or running water from a hose down can also sometimes be helpful in identifying a blockage (and can sometimes help to clear it.)

After that you (or someone you hire if it's not your thing) would get to checking and using all the cleanouts down inside the house, if the problem persists. For a typical venting setup with a single toilet, the fact that the toilet is affected points to the main vent (for this section of the house) being blocked, not just some tributary branch vent.