Edit: Ok no worries guys it was definitely just the tub leaking! It just took several hours for it to stop dripping afterwards which is why I was confused at whether or not it was the tub or something else. All is well! It’s a very infrequently used shower/tub so I hadn’t noticed anything prior.

I’m guessing it’s likely the tub drain itself that was leaking or it’s possible one of the outflow pipes leaked from there. Either way it’s not an urgent fix thankfully! I just posted this a bit hastily I suppose. I appreciate the comments!


Hello. So the other night I had a tub filled up with water for a prolonged period of time. I do not typically use the tub in that bathroom. The tub water was stagnant and thus the leak would not have been caused by inadequate caulking between the tub and wall.

Today I have awoken to find that my ceiling below the upstairs bathroom is wet and there is a dripping noise in the wall downstairs roughly under the tub.

I have drained the tub about 20 minutes ago, but there is still a slow, but continuous dripping noise in the wall below the bathroom. Since the dripping noise is still occurring at the same slow pace, does that mean it is unlikely to actually be dripping from the drain or pipework that drains from the tub?

My unit has a shared wall with the neighbor, so there is a chance that there is actually something leaking from their unit instead of mine.

Is there a way I can troubleshoot this a bit further without immediately ripping out the walls? Even if I can’t find the exact source, just narrowing it down to something with the neighbor versus my own bathroom would be helpful.

I can’t call a plumber right now because we literally just had a hurricane so they are going to be tied up for a bit.

Thanks all.

  • Thavron
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    1 month ago

    I’m not an expert, so maybe someone can say if this might be a valid theory, but could it be that the weight of the water for a prolonged period has caused some pipe to come loose or something like that?

    • dingus@lemmy.worldOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      edit-2
      1 month ago

      That’s an interesting theory. I’m not knowledgeable enough to know if that can happen. Where do you think that would cause a pipe to come loose do you think?