On Sat, 18 Aug 2018 18:34:50 -0500, Sqwertz >
wrote:
>On Sat, 18 Aug 2018 18:55:43 -0400, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
>
>> On 8/18/2018 5:06 PM, Sqwertz wrote:
>>> On Sat, 18 Aug 2018 16:19:32 -0400, wrote:
>>>
>>>> Early dinner... pork chop, refried black beans, and home growns:
>>>> https://postimg.cc/image/uwtd5cujv/
>>>
>>> For somebody who calls others cooking "plates full of shit", you
>>> clearly deserve the trophy in that category.
>>>
>>> ObRealFood: First try at shaping the pizza dough failed. Gotta
>>> re-ball it and let it rest for another 45 minutes. Kitchen sink is
>>> still clogged. Liquid Plumber "Guaranteed To Work!", my ass!
>>
>> Depends on where the clog really is. Plunger or snake usually is better.
>
>Did the plunger, disassembled the pipes underneath the sink, no clog
>there. Don't have a snake (well, not one for clearing pipes).
>
>As the ground gets hot here in the summer, grease tends to melt and
>pool in the pipes. Then hardens when it cools a little. Usually a
>few gallons of hot water (200F+) works but only if you can get
>partial drain. This is stopped shut - no drainage at all.
>
>-sw
Don't be so cheap, buy a plumber's snake, they don't cost very much,
Lowe's and Home Depot have them in various lenghts. I have two, a 25
footer and a 12 footer... I mainly use them to clear my gutter down
spouts, they sometimes clog with pine cones and twigs. Forget
chemicals, a plumber's snake along with a quality plunger works best.
You can always spring a hundred+ bucks for roto rooter... but a
plumber's snake is the answer.