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I tried to put the snake into the drain but often found myself poking at the wrong pipe. How does the professional plumber know they are working on the right pipe? Is it trial and error?

2007-08-27 16:35:36 · 6 answers · asked by Jason H 2 in Home & Garden Maintenance & Repairs

6 answers

If the kitchen sink drain is clogged then you can drop down through the vent from the roof, assuming you having access to the roof and vent. In so doing you are coming down from the top and would go all the way on through to the drain. If you remove the trap and look in the drain with a flashlight you should see a fitting going down or sideways, if it is going sideways then it is possible to go up the vent, in which case you can bend a small kink on the end of the cable, make sure it is pointed down and then keep the cable positioned with the kink pointing down and then you should make the bend. The kink on the end of the cable will also help clean the drain better because of a 1/4" of 3/8" diameter going throug the line the kink will now give the cable a larger/wider cleaning area. Best of luck.

2007-08-28 03:48:01 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

96% of all plumbing is the same in every house. And if you have a working knowledge of how pipes are plumbed you have a good idea. You can pretty much figure out where problems can/will occur. The other 4% is the unknown of what someone has done to the piping over the years.

2007-08-28 17:20:01 · answer #2 · answered by andyj38467 3 · 0 0

Yes, it's all sound and feel.
I've watched them work and they hit the wrong pipe just as often as anyone else but will go back in at various angles until they "feel" the correct pipe or can hear it.
It's especially time consuming and frustrating when the pipes (especially on older construction) incorporate 90 degree turns, but you have to keep at it until you hit the right one.

2007-08-28 03:15:45 · answer #3 · answered by copious 4 · 0 0

Trade secret man. Hahah. Really there is some skill to directing that thing, but it is a lot of luck and trial and error.

2007-08-28 07:35:09 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I'm not a plumber, but they don't have any better sense of what's plugged than we do, in my opinion. Snake one side, if that doesn't work, snake the other. Plumbers might remove the traps, which we may not be inclined to do, that's all I can think of.

2007-08-27 16:44:52 · answer #5 · answered by Darby 7 · 0 2

usually can tell by the sound it,s making, and how fast it feeds out, if it,s banging it,s in a larger pipe, makes less noise when in a small pipe,

2007-08-27 16:45:45 · answer #6 · answered by William B 7 · 0 0

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