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Strange 'fishy' smell
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Posted by tarajen (My Page) on Tue, May 23, 06 at 11:09
| Hello all - My parents are having an issue with a somewhat fishy odor that comes & goes in one area of the house. When present it's noticeble when you come up the stairs into the hallway. They can't seem to pin point the source of it or identify any factors that may be contributing to it (time of day, heat, mold, dead animals).
I've seen some information indicating that it could be "sewer gas" coming in from one of the faucets that isn't used on the double sink in the bathroom, but wouldn't that have more of a "sewer" odor?
They're about at their wits end with it, especially since they're attempting to sell the house and prospective buyers have noted that they've encountered the smell. I beleive that this is something that has only come about in the last year or so. They've lived in the house for 10 years & it was never a problem before now. They have not painted in that area recently or had any other major work done. They did get the water heater replaced a few years ago, but I can't recall if the smell began before or after that, I'll have to ask.
Any ideas or suggestions? They really don't want to have someone start knocking holes in the wall to figure out where it's coming from, but it's starting to look like they might not have a choice. Is there such a thing as a "Smell Detective?" (Hehe!)
I really appreciate any feedback you guys have to offer! Thank you!!! |
Follow-Up Postings:
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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A drain (not the faucet) in a disused sink could well be the source of the problem. The water in the trap can evaporate, leaving nothing to prevent sewer gas from entering the house. This is a fairly common source of this type of problem in basements: floor drains that aren't used much or at all. A badly corroded or broken vent line inside a finished wall could cause this as well, damage can occur when someone drive a nail into a wall and punctures a vent line without realizing it. The intermittent nature of the problem fits with an open vent somewhere, as the problem will be worst whenever water is draining and causing air to move within the vent system. Toilets flushing; bathtubs, clothes washers and dishwashers emptying, etc. |
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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| Airqual Guy - Thank you so much for your reply! I'm forwarding the information over to my Mom right now. Hopefully this will help us to solve the mystery! :) Tara |
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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Hi, I just read your message. I am having the same problem in 2 closets in my home. I noticed the smell after I painted them and hung shelves and hooks. The smell is very strong on some days and milder on others. If I "punctured a vent line" do I have to tear down all the walls to find it? What do I do? I look forward to hearing from you, thanks so much, |
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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| when you hung the shelves you should have noticed one area that was more difficult to drill into. vent pipes are made of several different materials. older houses have black iron or clay pipe (hard to drill into but not impossible); newer houses have black plastic (ABS in our area, drills like butter). you wouldn't need to tear down the walls. If in fact you did drill into a vent pipe, you already know the location (it's the fastener). first determine if you've drilled a vent. If you have you can plug it with epoxy of some other adhesive. The vent line doesn't have any pressure or liquids. |
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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| Good point re vent lines, but a fishy smell is almost certainly something dead...mouse or rat or something....perhaps a building or better still, pest inspector could narrow it down, they'd be the ones to know! |
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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| We kept smelling a fishy smell and it turned out to be an electrical outlet that was melting inside the wall. The circuit was overloaded (we did not know that). It took the outlet smoking before we figured it out. Since then we smelled that fishy smell again and found another outlet to replace. We were lucky both times that we were home or our house could of burned down. I would take off the outlet covers in that area where you smell that fishy smell and inspect the wires inside. |
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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On anohter thread, a "fishy" smell turned out to be melting plastic light covers....the bulbs were too high wattage. I would check everything plastic in the area. |
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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| Found the source of the smell. Thanks to the posting by LOGIC - I saw that the plastic fixtures (supplied by the builder) were melting. We took them down and they smelled like fish!!!! Thanks for the all the help. |
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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Hi there! I too have this beloved odor permiating the walls in my sons room. I've read some of the commentary posted, and so far, it's not anything leaking, not any dead animals in my walls, my electrical seems to be in order (I've felt the sockets in the room as well as in the adjacent room, and they are all cool - so I don't believe anything is melting behind the wall). My husband and I are going insane trying to resolve this. Are there any other suggestions I may have missed??? Thanks for your ideas!!! |
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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| I had this same problem at my house. Was ceramic-base light fixtures. Post is here on my blog. |
Here is a link that might be useful: Bad Fishy Smell Ceramic Base Lights
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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| if your son is a teen, then you REALLY don't want to know what the smell is. |
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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| Oh come on DavidandKasie -- Don't leave us guessing on that one... |
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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| let's just say that as they outgrow toys they find new things to play with. this results in a certain smell permeating the air. |
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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| Thanks to your posts, I was able to solve the two year old mystery of the disgusting fish smell that came and went in my kid's bedroom. It was the hanging lamp. The socket was brown and cracked, and on the way to causing a fire. It smelled like fish! I was at my wits end over the odor, ready to call a contractor. It was cheaper to throw away the lamp! Thanks again. |
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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| My neighbors were having a fishy odor in a hallway closet, under the stairs. At first they thought it was something (rodent) that had died inside a wall, but, after carefully checking, couldn't find anything. This smell has gone on for months and seemed to be really bad one evening. I decided to google it and found this forum along with another one that all basically said the same thing. One thing stood out though...the comment that said..."Check the electrical, nothing smells as bad as a burnt down house". My neighbors electrical panel is in that closet. Sure enough, her husband discovered a hot wire that night. Upon pulling the breaker, he dicovered that the back of the breaker had actually melted inside the panel. Thanks for the heads up!!!! |
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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| Thanks for the info about the smell being related to electrical- I always assumed that an electrical would smell- well like that burning electrical odor. I do have to laugh about the smell of fish/electric. Many years ago I had a friend that was married. She and DH started having marital problems and it turns out he had a mistress- and a child with her. When my friend found out she immediately packed everything, while packing revenge of a scorned woman set in. She took all of the wall plates for the outlets off and stuck sardines from a can into them and put the plates back on - with liquid nails. It was an ugly divorce but she took some satisfaction when he called her asking about the odor- she told him it was the stench of infidelity and lies. Moral of the story- smell something fishy and you can't get the wall plates off- you've got bigger problems |
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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I may be a bit late on this post but info of this sort on the net may save a house or a life one day, so allow me to add my 2 cents worth of info on fish odor, it may help someone someday. I am a certified mold inspector and certified indoor environmentalist and have encountered strange fish odor that comes and goes, this was investigated by me during an inspection of a trailer in South Florida. The fish odor was coming from an overheating breaker panel that I tracked down while using a laser thermometer. The new IR cameras work even better at finding heat sources. In addition I have researched this condition extensively and found it to often be the result of overheating plastic components belonging to light fixtures and switches etc. Warning!!! You should have a home inspector or certified electrician who uses an infrared (heat seeking) camera to find out the location of any overheating electrical components before it gets worse. It is hard to believe that air quality consultant’s e will tell you this was from sewer gas. Such assumptions are misleading and dangerous because while your plumber is on a wild goose chase looking from sewer gas that smells like fish, the wires in your walls may be getting dangerously hot. Many eighth grade science students will correctly tell you that sewer gas or hydrogen sulfide smells like rotten eggs or sulfur and not like rotten fish. Please see the full article accessible from my websites site map page. If the link does not work type in the keywords florida mold inspectors then go to the site map and scroll down till you see a link to a fish odor article on the site. |
Here is a link that might be useful: fish odor in my home article
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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| It's true, I've smelled a hot electrical smell that could be argued to be fishy, hot bakelite especially. |
RE: Strange 'fishy' smell
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| Curtain Rods! She spent the first day packing her belongings into boxes, crates and suitcases. On the second day, she had the movers come and collect her things. On the third day, she sat down for the last time at their beautiful dining room table by candle-light, put on some soft background music, and feasted on a pound of shrimp, a jar of caviar, and a bottle of spring-water. When she had finished, she went into each and every room and deposited a few half-eaten shrimp shells dipped in caviar into the hollow of the curtain rods. She then cleaned up the kitchen and left. When the husband returned with his new girlfriend, all was bliss for the first few days. Then slowly, the house began to smell. They tried everything; cleaning, mopping and airing the place out. Vents were checked for dead rodents and carpets were steam cleaned. Air fresheners were hung everywhere. Exterminators were brought in to set off gas canisters, during which they had to move out for a few days and in the end they even paid to replace the expensive wool carpeting. Nothing worked! People stopped coming over to visit. Repairmen refused to work in the house. The maid quit. Finally, they could not take the stench any longer and decided to move. A month later, even though they had cut their price in half, they could not find a buyer for their stinky house. Word got out and eventually even the local realtors refused to return their calls. Finally, they had to borrow a huge sum of money from the bank to purchase a new place. The ex-wife called the man and asked how things were going. He told her the saga of the rotting house. She listened politely and said that she missed her old home terribly and would be willing to reduce her divorce settlement in exchange for getting the house back. Knowing his ex-wife had no idea how bad the smell was, he agreed on a price that was about 1/10th of what the house had been worth, but only if she were to sign the papers that very day. She agreed and within the hour his lawyers delivered the paperwork. A week later the man and his girlfriend stood smiling as they watched the moving company pack everything to take to their new home......... And to spite the ex-wife, they even took the curtain rods!!!!!! 
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