

On the plumbing forum, I’ve mentioned this tool several times. I used it at my son's house to be sure his drain lines from the rain gutter downspouts to the street were clear of debris and sand. It paid for itself the first time since a plumber wanted around $400 to clean it out this drain.

It was about an eight inch solid piece of grease, soap and sand. On pulling back the Clog Hog hose, the clog finally broke up into pieces. It finally broke through and I the nozzle was at the outside clean out but the line still would not drain. Check Order Status Check Order Status Pay Your Credit Card Order Cancellation Returns. I then just keep steady pressure on the Clog Hog and let it do its job. Please call us at: 1-800-HOME-DEPOT (1-80) Customer Service. After about twenty minutes I still was not through the clog. After some experimenting by rapidly opening and closing the pressure want allowed the nozzle and hose to work through the trap. I connected everything up and fired away.

The mop sink drain was 2" but under a concrete floor so to maneuver through the trap about 18 inches down was of concern. When I received it I was very happy to see how thin the hose was and a very short nozzle. I already had a pressure washer but my wand would not work with it so I bought one at the local HD and I ordered the 50' Clog Hog. I then read about the Clog Hog on a plumbing forum and I Google search it. In part was the mop sink drain strainer was missing and I pulled out 2 rags using a hand snake but the line remained blocked. After having the grease trap cleaned and the main waste lines to the trap jetted, the mop sink next to the kitchen remained clogged.įor years, many have tried and I tried it by using snakes and even rented a power drain cleaner. At our church a grease trap and the drain lines from the kitchen were never maintained, maybe for thirty years.
