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Plumbing Terms, Defined.

The words plumbers throw around, in plain English. Whenever a term links to a service, you can tap through to learn what we actually do about it.

Anode Rod
A sacrificial metal rod inside a tank water heater that corrodes first so the tank doesn’t rust out. Replacing it on schedule adds years of life. Learn more →
Auger / Drain Snake
A flexible cable fed down a drain to break up or pull out a clog. The hand version handles sinks; powered augers clear main lines. Learn more →
Backflow
Unwanted reverse flow of water that can pull contaminants back into your clean supply. A backflow preventer stops it.
CIPP (Cured-In-Place Pipe)
A trenchless repair that slides a resin-soaked sleeve into an old pipe and hardens it into a smooth new pipe — no full dig. Learn more →
Cleanout
A capped, accessible fitting that lets a plumber reach your sewer line to clear blockages without tearing anything up.
Flange
A flat connecting collar — most often the toilet flange that seals and anchors your toilet to the floor drain. Learn more →
Gas Line
The piping that carries natural gas to your appliances. By law it must be installed, modified, and pressure-tested by a licensed pro. Learn more →
Hard Water
Water high in calcium and magnesium. It leaves scale on fixtures and builds up inside pipes and water heaters. Learn more →
Hydro Jetting
High-pressure water — up to about 4,000 PSI — that scours grease, scale, and tree roots out of a pipe, not just punches a hole through the clog. Learn more →
Hydrostatic Test
A pressure test that fills your system with water to reveal hidden leaks in pipes or the sewer line.
Main Line / Sewer Main
The primary line that carries all of your home’s wastewater out to the city sewer. A clog here can back up the whole house. Learn more →
P-Trap
The U-shaped pipe under sinks and tubs. It holds a little water that blocks sewer gas from drifting up into your home.
PEX
Flexible plastic pipe widely used in modern repipes. It resists corrosion, handles freezing better than copper, and installs fast. Learn more →
Pressure Reducing Valve (PRV)
A valve that lowers high incoming city water pressure to a safe level so it doesn’t hammer your pipes, fixtures, and appliances. Learn more →
Repipe
Replacing a home’s old or corroded water pipes — usually with copper or PEX — to stop leaks, rust, and low pressure for good. Learn more →
Rooter
A cutting tool (and the service named after it) that shreds tree roots and tough blockages out of drain and sewer lines. Learn more →
Scale
Hard mineral buildup from hard water that narrows pipes and clogs fixtures, valves, and water heaters over time. Learn more →
Sediment
Mineral grit that settles at the bottom of a water heater tank, lowering efficiency and causing that rumbling/popping sound. Learn more →
Sewer Camera Inspection
Running a waterproof video camera through your pipes to pinpoint exactly where a clog, crack, or root intrusion is — before anyone digs. Learn more →
Sewer Ejector Pump
A pump that lifts wastewater from fixtures below the sewer line (like a basement bathroom) up to the main line. Learn more →
Shutoff Valve
A valve that stops water to a single fixture or the whole house. Knowing where yours is the most useful thing in a leak emergency. Learn more →
Slab Leak
A leak in a water line running beneath your home’s concrete foundation. Often shows up as a warm floor spot or a spiking water bill. Learn more →
Sump Pump
A pump that removes water collecting in a basin to keep basements and low areas from flooding.
Tankless Water Heater
Heats water on demand as it flows, instead of keeping a tank hot 24/7. Saves space and energy and never “runs out.” Learn more →
Trenchless
Any method that repairs or replaces underground pipe with little or no digging — saving your yard, driveway, and time. Learn more →
Water Hammer
The banging noise in your walls when fast-moving water stops suddenly. Usually fixed with arrestors or by correcting high pressure.

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