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plumbing question

foghorn67

Lifer
Can I use one of the do-it-yourself snakes that attach to drills?
the water seems to back up right away, does that mean the bottleneck is close to the shower drain.
My last house had this problem, but it took it a little bit before it slowed, and the plumber said the block was between the shower and kitchen sink, a ways off.
Or are those snakes a waste of money?
thanks
 
I usually buy a bottle of liquid drano or something like that, you know... the stuff whose odor would strip paint off a streetcar? But its always worked for me.

 
1. Check for hair clogs in the drain. That's usually what it is. Mine does this every so often.
2. Drano. The foamy stuff works pretty good.
3. You can get this pressurized drano stuff too. Works even better.
4. Move.
 
it depends on how old your bath drain/trap is.

one old style is to bury it under the bathroom floor--in that case a snake might not work given the shape of the trap and the configuration of the pipes leading to it--need to try a strong drain cleaner or compressed air.

otherwise a snake is the best option.
 
Check for clogs right at the drain first, then snake it out if the blockage is further down. Those liquid drain cleaners are a waste of time IMHO. Also, you don't need to use a drill for the snake - you can do it by hand if need be.
 
Do any men in your house, ummm, satisfy themselves in the shower? That product is not a good mix with hair. :evil:
 
sounds like hair. between my wife and 2 daughters my shower drain always gets plugged. drano wont work because the hair gets stuck ont he cross piece thats about a inch down the drain. I normally plunge it to make sure i get all of it caught on that cross piece then take a pair of plyers and a razor blade and cut it out. thats the only way i can unplug it.
 
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