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As God as my witness, I thought bathtub drains had goosenecks


Ralphie

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But I guess there is snot room for that. I recently tried to remove my daughters’ hair from it with a drain cleaner plastic thingy, only to have it break off. Then I discovered why using one of those was a bad idea-there is a right angle instead of the gooseneck I was picturing. Thankfully I was able to use my favourite tool to get hold of the broken plastic-a pinchy thinghy that allowed me to manipulate it enough to get a grip on it with. needlenose plaars.  Turned a bad situation good. :)

 

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1 hour ago, Longjohn said:

Acid drain cleaners dissolve hair quickly.

That is what I usually use and it does work well, although I thought Drano and the like were lye, but all we had on hand was that plastic thinghy, and the mechanical extraction did work well aside from that near miss of possibly getting it stuck in the pipe forever and ever!

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4 hours ago, RalphWaldoMooseworth said:

That is what I usually use and it does work well, although I thought Drano and the like were lye, but all we had on hand was that plastic thinghy, and the mechanical extraction did work well aside from that near miss of possibly getting it stuck in the pipe forever and ever!

They make both, both will work (not together). I always used the acid because it worked better for me. CLOBBER was my drain cleaner of choice.

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31 minutes ago, Mr. Silly said:

Prevention is more valuable than a cure.  You should pour a couple glugs of bleach down the tub drain every week.  Bleach dissolves bio-matter pretty well which can reduce the possibility of a clog without harming the pipes.   

DO YOU REALIZE THE CURRENT MARKET VALUE OF THAT BLEACH RIGHT NOW?!?!?!?!?!?!

That's like pouring gold bullion down the drain!

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1 hour ago, 2Far said:

Yeah, gotta be a trap somewhere, otherwise poo-tinky fo shizzle.

I usually use the Drano gel, seems to work well. I recent bought this, but haven't had a chance to use it yet.

Yeah, I still don’t know how this trap works, it must be sloped slightly.  One plumber’s site says drain eventually will hurt your pipes and it is snot for regular use, they recommend plungers and snakes before calling them, so I need to crack the whip on the daughters. 

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1 hour ago, Mr. Silly said:

Prevention is more valuable than a cure.  You should pour a couple glugs of bleach down the tub drain every week.  Bleach dissolves bio-matter pretty well which can reduce the possibility of a clog without harming the pipes.   

I've heard that a squirt of Dawn dish soap once a week is helpful, too.

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36 minutes ago, RalphWaldoMooseworth said:

Yeah, I still don’t know how this trap works, it must be sloped slightly.  One plumber’s site says drain eventually will hurt your pipes and it is snot for regular use, they recommend plungers and snakes before calling them, so I need to crack the whip on the daughters. 

Yes.  I have talked to many plumbers and drain DIY'ers, and all recommend against drain cleaners.  Plungers are okay but don't always work for one reason or the other.  Snakes are best, in my experience.

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2 hours ago, Road Runner said:

Yes.  I have talked to many plumbers and drain DIY'ers, and all recommend against drain cleaners.  Plungers are okay but don't always work for one reason or the other.  Snakes are best, in my experience.

Yeah that drain cleaner stuff that's sold in plastic bottles and will stay in the plastic bottle on the shelf for 385 years should never be used for 15 minutes at a time on plastic drain pipes.

Says the same guy that charges $200 an hour (plus mileage) to come unplug your pipes.

#commonsense

 

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27 minutes ago, Kzoo said:

Yeah that drain cleaner stuff that's sold in plastic bottles and will stay in the plastic bottle on the shelf for 385 years should never be used for 15 minutes at a time on plastic drain pipes.

Says the same guy that charges $200 an hour (plus mileage) to come unplug your pipes.

#commonsense

 

Although the concept of pouring all those chemicals down the drain doesn't thrill me.

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Just now, 12string said:

Although the concept of pouring all those chemicals down the drain doesn't thrill me.

Well there is that.  But that's a different conversation than the 15 to 20 minutes that they sit in your trap before being diluted with hot water according to the instructions.

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15 hours ago, RalphWaldoMooseworth said:

But I guess there is snot room for that. I recently tried to remove my daughters’ hair from it with a drain cleaner plastic thingy, only to have it break off. Then I discovered why using one of those was a bad idea-there is a right angle instead of the gooseneck I was picturing. Thankfully I was able to use my favourite tool to get hold of the broken plastic-a pinchy thinghy that allowed me to manipulate it enough to get a grip on it with. needlenose plaars.  Turned a bad situation good. :)

 

Those in both my houses have traps.  I'll ask "in case I drop something" but the drains in the shower/tub and the walk-in shower in my apartment probably both have traps.

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2 hours ago, Road Runner said:

Yes.  I have talked to many plumbers and drain DIY'ers, and all recommend against drain cleaners.  Plungers are okay but don't always work for one reason or the other.  Snakes are best, in my experience.

A friend of mine who owns a plumbing company is the one who turned me on to clobber. He snaked the tile field where I work and then followed it up with Clobber. He recommended it to me and reminded me to wear eye protection and rubber gloves.

Someone flushed a wooden name tag and the pipes ran under the concrete slab. The power snake couldn’t budge it. A good dose of clobber and the wooden tag was gone. Don’t splash any on anything you need. (It comes in a plastic bottle so I guess it won’t clear a plastic clog)

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2 hours ago, Kzoo said:

Yeah that drain cleaner stuff that's sold in plastic bottles and will stay in the plastic bottle on the shelf for 385 years should never be used for 15 minutes at a time on plastic drain pipes.

Says the same guy that charges $200 an hour (plus mileage) to come unplug your pipes.

#commonsense

 

You're right.  I was thinking of my neighborhood of older homes.  All of the drains here were originally galvanized steel.  Some homes have been replaced with plastic, but mine are the original steel.  My neighbor repeatedly used a caustic cleaner on his kitchen sink and soon had to replace all of his drain pipes.  Probably for the best, but I'd rather keep the old stuff as long as it still works.  

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Due to the duct work for the furnace, the J trap for our master bathroom shower was installed several feet down the drain line for maintenance. Which sounds OK, but on super windy days it dries out if you don't use the shower everyday. :wacko:

On another note, when our DIL stays over, she'll plug the guest shower with hair within a few days. We leave one of these drain cleaner thingys in the shower just for her.

drain.jpg

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6 hours ago, Mr. Silly said:

Prevention is more valuable than a cure.  You should pour a couple glugs of bleach down the tub drain every week.  Bleach dissolves bio-matter pretty well which can reduce the possibility of a clog without harming the pipes.   

I'll try some bleach and chase it with ammonia just for old times sake. :D

 

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5 minutes ago, team scooter said:

Due to the duct work for the furnace, the J trap for our master bathroom shower was installed several feet down the drain line for maintenance. Which sounds OK, but on super windy days it dries out if you don't use the shower everyday. :wacko:

On another note, when our DIL stays over, she'll plug the guest shower with hair within a few days. We leave one of these drain cleaner thingys in the shower just for her.

drain.jpg

I would only use that on gooseneck traps after almost loosing half of it in the shower drain.  I hate making things worse.

We have a wire mesh strainer in the drain, but when it is full of their heir they just take it oot rather than cleaning it  Raised by wolves apparently. :(

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OK, this is what I was looking for.   There is a gooseneck, it's just that it is snot right at the drain and there is no way that red plastic thinghy is getting anyway near it.  The right angle at the drain is a problem, but at least it seemed to catch all the heir with the vortex breaker.  So a gooseneck would seldom plug anyway since it is pretty free flowing.

Bathtub-Plumbing-Diagram-2.jpg

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2 minutes ago, RalphWaldoMooseworth said:

OK, this is what I was looking for.   There is a gooseneck, it's just that it is snot right at the drain and there is no way that red plastic thinghy is getting anyway near it.  The right angle at the drain is a problem, but at least it seemed to catch all the heir with the vortex breaker.

Bathtub-Plumbing-Diagram-2.jpg

2 screws to remove the flapper/stopper and snake from there.  Easy peasy

 

 

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15 minutes ago, Kzoo said:

2 screws to remove the flapper/stopper and snake from there.  Easy peasy

 

 

No screws, and the problemo is the vortex breaker and tight right angle with more restrictions inside snapped the red plastic thinghy with hooks very easily.  The wire mesh is the best prevention I think, but only if it is used!

I don't think mine is brass, but it has a similar restriction inside which I assume is the vortex breaker, or maybe it is a hair catcher!  It sure works as one!

173014_usn.jpg

One thing that had me thinking it was a trap was it had a water level in it.  I'll have to see if it still does because I don't know why it would, it should be sloped to drain I would think.  Of course improper installation is always a possibility.

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3 minutes ago, Bikeguy said:

The best part of the drawing...  is the P trap.  Seems appropriate for this from.

I just thought is was called a goose neck too.

My research into this has turned up J traps and the illegal S trap and archaic drum trap.  I think I will just step away slowly. ;D

 

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