Did my own home plumbing tonight and have to say I'm pretty proud of myself. My sink in my bathroom was getting progressively worse to drain since I have moved in to the point today where I would turn the faucet on and the drain would immediately fill up causing water to backup into the basin.
I went out to home depot today and picked up a cup plunger and a 15' auger (retain cost was $18.00 for both). First I tried the plunger, but I realized I needed some duct tape to cover the overflow in the sink. I also covered the tub drain and overflow since I didn't know if they had a common path to the stack or not.
Anyway, I fill the sink basin half full with hot water from the tap, which didn't take too long and start plunging. Immediately I'm met with grey water and a stench beyond belief from the drain. I have a small house so it made the entire place kind of smell a bit funky. Plunging seemed to make it worse but I was able to collect a bunch of smaller debris that was brought up from the drain with some paper towel.
Next up I thought I'd give the auger a try. I got through the basin trap relatively easily but water still wouldn't flow down so I pressed on. I guess the main clog was somewhere in the wall because I have to say I must have been at least 8-9 feet down on the auger before the drain finally began to clear. After I brought the auger back up I ran some hot water down the drain for a couple minutes to make sure it hadn't clogged further down which thankfully it hadn't and now I have a clear sink basin. Also I checked the basement to make sure I didn't poke a whole through the pipe with the auger even though I was going really slow and I didn't know if they had PVC in the wall I wanted to make sure I didn't just poke a hole somewhere and have all the water seep into the wall or underneath the floor or leak into the basement.
I'm not sure what drain-o does but I keep reading bad shit about it so I didn't even try that. My advice is to definitely give this a try first before you call a plumber who will definitely charge you more. This whole process took maybe 20 minutes. Also, be careful using a auger or rooter that is powered by a drill. If you go too fast you could seriously damage your pipes, especially if they are pvc since the auger is basically coiled up galvanised steel and has a sharp tip to it.
I went out to home depot today and picked up a cup plunger and a 15' auger (retain cost was $18.00 for both). First I tried the plunger, but I realized I needed some duct tape to cover the overflow in the sink. I also covered the tub drain and overflow since I didn't know if they had a common path to the stack or not.
Anyway, I fill the sink basin half full with hot water from the tap, which didn't take too long and start plunging. Immediately I'm met with grey water and a stench beyond belief from the drain. I have a small house so it made the entire place kind of smell a bit funky. Plunging seemed to make it worse but I was able to collect a bunch of smaller debris that was brought up from the drain with some paper towel.
Next up I thought I'd give the auger a try. I got through the basin trap relatively easily but water still wouldn't flow down so I pressed on. I guess the main clog was somewhere in the wall because I have to say I must have been at least 8-9 feet down on the auger before the drain finally began to clear. After I brought the auger back up I ran some hot water down the drain for a couple minutes to make sure it hadn't clogged further down which thankfully it hadn't and now I have a clear sink basin. Also I checked the basement to make sure I didn't poke a whole through the pipe with the auger even though I was going really slow and I didn't know if they had PVC in the wall I wanted to make sure I didn't just poke a hole somewhere and have all the water seep into the wall or underneath the floor or leak into the basement.
I'm not sure what drain-o does but I keep reading bad shit about it so I didn't even try that. My advice is to definitely give this a try first before you call a plumber who will definitely charge you more. This whole process took maybe 20 minutes. Also, be careful using a auger or rooter that is powered by a drill. If you go too fast you could seriously damage your pipes, especially if they are pvc since the auger is basically coiled up galvanised steel and has a sharp tip to it.
"An old man dies, a young girl lives, fair trade." - Bruce Willis from Sin City.
[url=http://profile.xfire.com/imakeholesinu][img]http://miniprofile.xfire.com/bg/bg/type/0/imakeholesinu.png[/img][/url]
[url=http://www.myspace.com/atmosphere][img]http://rhymesayers.com/promo/banners/youcant-banner.gif[/img][/url]
[url=http://profile.xfire.com/imakeholesinu][img]http://miniprofile.xfire.com/bg/bg/type/0/imakeholesinu.png[/img][/url]
[url=http://www.myspace.com/atmosphere][img]http://rhymesayers.com/promo/banners/youcant-banner.gif[/img][/url]