Stop Guessing and Start Knowing
Sewer line problems are invisible by nature. Without a camera, diagnosing what’s happening inside a buried pipe means relying on symptoms and educated guesses. A camera inspection eliminates that uncertainty. We feed a high-resolution camera through the line and see exactly what’s there in real time, whether that’s a buildup of grease and debris, a section of root intrusion, a bellied pipe that traps waste, a crack in the line, or a complete collapse. That information changes the repair conversation entirely. Instead of recommending work based on assumptions, we can show you what we found and explain precisely what it will take to fix it.
What a Camera Inspection Can Reveal
Sewer camera inspections in Palatine uncover a range of conditions that would otherwise go undetected until they cause a backup or require emergency repair. Tree root intrusion is one of the most common findings in established neighborhoods where mature trees have had decades to work their way into older clay or cast iron sewer lines. Grease and debris accumulation, offset or separated joints, pipe corrosion, bellied sections where the line has settled and dips, and partial or full collapses are all conditions a camera can identify clearly. Knowing which of these is present before any repair work begins is the difference between a targeted fix and an expensive process of elimination.
When to Schedule a Camera Inspection
There are several situations where a sewer camera inspection is a practical next step. Recurring drain backups that keep returning despite cleaning, slow drains throughout the home rather than in just one fixture, gurgling sounds from multiple drains, or a sewage smell without an obvious source are all good reasons to get a look inside the line. A camera inspection is also strongly recommended before purchasing an older home, before hydro jetting a line with an unknown history, and any time a significant sewer repair is being considered so the full scope of the problem is understood before work begins.
What Happens After the Inspection
A camera inspection is only useful if it leads to clear next steps. Once we’ve completed the inspection, we’ll walk you through what the footage shows in plain language and give you an honest assessment of what, if anything, needs to be done. In some cases the line is in better shape than the symptoms suggested and a cleaning is all that’s needed. In others, the inspection reveals a repair that’s worth addressing before a bigger failure occurs. Either way, you’ll have the information you need to make a sound decision rather than proceeding blind.
