Hydro Jetting + Camera Inspection
Hydro Jetting + CCTV Camera Inspection — Storm Lines & Catch Basin Outlets, Lower Mainland
If the same drain keeps blocking, cleaning the basin is not solving the problem. High-pressure line jetting clears the obstruction. A CCTV camera run immediately after shows you what caused it — root intrusion, pipe offset, belly, or collapse — so you can decide whether repair is needed before the next backup. Call (778) 312-3314 or submit the form.
Request service
Cleaned but still backing up?
Use the repeat-backup guide before booking another temporary cleanout.
If a basin was cleaned but the outlet still holds water, hydro jetting and CCTV inspection may need to happen together. The guide explains when to flush the line, when to run the camera and when repair planning becomes the practical next step. Read the cleaned-but-still-backing-up guide.
Jetting + diagnosis
Clear the blockage, then confirm why it happened.
Hydro jetting alone tells you the line is flowing. It does not tell you whether a root has cracked the pipe wall, whether there is a belly holding sediment that will re-block within weeks, or whether an offset joint is catching debris on every rain event. Running a camera after jetting — when the line is clear and visible — gives you the pipe condition picture you need to make a repair decision with confidence rather than guessing. This combination is particularly useful before a strata or property manager commits to a repair budget or before a contractor excavates.
Prefer phone?
For active flooding or a site that needs fast triage, call dispatch. For planned maintenance, the form works well.
(778) 312-3314- Jetting and camera inspection completed in the same service visit when site conditions allow
- Storm lines, catch basin outlets, perimeter drains and sewer laterals
- Camera footage and written findings provided after inspection
- Serving commercial, strata, industrial and construction sites across the Lower Mainland
Landing page FAQ
Questions before you request service.
Do the jetting and camera inspection have to happen on the same day?
Running the camera immediately after jetting is the most useful sequence — the line is clear and the camera has the best visibility. If scheduling requires separate visits, that works too, but a pre-jetting camera run on a heavily blocked line may have limited visibility. We can advise the best order based on your situation when you call.
What defects can the camera actually detect in a storm line?
Root intrusion, cracked or broken pipe sections, offset or separated joints, pipe belly (low spot holding water and sediment), collapsed sections, and debris accumulation points. The camera shows the interior condition of the pipe — it does not provide a structural engineering assessment, but it gives a clear picture of what is causing repeated blockages.
We have a recurring blockage in the same spot every year. Is this worth investigating with a camera?
Yes — a recurring blockage in the same location almost always has a structural cause: a root entry point, a joint offset catching debris, or a belly that sediment settles into. Jetting clears it temporarily. The camera tells you whether a targeted repair would eliminate the problem permanently, which is usually cheaper than annual emergency call-outs over five years.