- Jul 11, 2001
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My washing machine drains into one of those large plastic square sink-tubs you can pick up at Home Depot, etc. The hose from the washing machine dumps water into the sink, where it accumulates quickly, usually more quickly than the sink's drain can accept it to the sewer line. That's the purpose of the sink -- to make sure you don't get a back-flow onto the laundry room floor.
Water from the machine always has a lint component that will slowly build up in the drain pipe leading to the sewer line, necessitating an occasional cleaning with a snake of some kind. To prevent this from happening with any frequency (I haven't had to do it since installing the washing machine a dozen years ago), at a hardware store you can buy a lint-collecting fine metal screen sock that fits over the hose that comes from the machine and hangs over the edge of the tub. This sock eventually gets clogged with lint, after maybe 10-20 loads. I bought a pair of these a dozen years ago and have never had to replace them. If you have a washing machine that drains into a tub-sink, you can do the same:
Take a metal coat hanger and untwist at the top so that you have an approximately 4 foot length of wire with one end hooked. When a metal screen sock gets clogged with lint, let it dry thoroughly and hang it over the hooked end of the coat hanger. Go outside and with a flame, light the bottom of the metal sock. Hold it away from you and allow the flame to engulf the sock and burn itself out. Then put the sock in a sink and scrub briefly with a brush to dislodge any ashes. Voila! Ready for reuse.
Water from the machine always has a lint component that will slowly build up in the drain pipe leading to the sewer line, necessitating an occasional cleaning with a snake of some kind. To prevent this from happening with any frequency (I haven't had to do it since installing the washing machine a dozen years ago), at a hardware store you can buy a lint-collecting fine metal screen sock that fits over the hose that comes from the machine and hangs over the edge of the tub. This sock eventually gets clogged with lint, after maybe 10-20 loads. I bought a pair of these a dozen years ago and have never had to replace them. If you have a washing machine that drains into a tub-sink, you can do the same:
Take a metal coat hanger and untwist at the top so that you have an approximately 4 foot length of wire with one end hooked. When a metal screen sock gets clogged with lint, let it dry thoroughly and hang it over the hooked end of the coat hanger. Go outside and with a flame, light the bottom of the metal sock. Hold it away from you and allow the flame to engulf the sock and burn itself out. Then put the sock in a sink and scrub briefly with a brush to dislodge any ashes. Voila! Ready for reuse.
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