Quizzes & Puzzles15 mins ago
Blocked outside drain
11 Answers
Can anyone please help me, I have just moved into a house and it has a few drains outside. (small grid with a pipe going down). These have obviously been neglected for some time and are blocked with mud. Does anyone have any advise how to clean them out? Would kitchen sink and plughole stuff do the job?
Thanks
Thanks
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by sairejayne. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Thanks for all your help. I think I will have to try rodding it as the pipe is only about 4/5cm diamenter beneath the grate and i'm not sure I would get anything else in there. It is absolutely totally chocka with mud so i guess it will be tough - have no idea how it got there!
Do i just shove rods down and pull it out again??
Janetsflower, i'm not suprised your went crazy at your husband - typical thing a bloke would do! I bet he didn't understand why you were so angry!
Do i just shove rods down and pull it out again??
Janetsflower, i'm not suprised your went crazy at your husband - typical thing a bloke would do! I bet he didn't understand why you were so angry!
4-5cm pipework sounds like a DIY bodge to me as soil pipes are 4" or very min 3" and an outside drain should either have 'P trap' that collects the sludge and muck or if its rainwater to a soakaway, a 4" soil pipe straight to the soakaway. Go to a garden centre and find the smallest adjustable hose attachment, set it as a jet and poke it down the pipe and keep working it down and back. Can you find out where this pipe goes - have a look in the nearest inspection cover, you may be able to work from the other end as well. Try that before trying to rod such a small pipe.
janets flower -your hubby's method is very effective-thought it was only myself & my workmate knew about that one
yup landscaper this should have been a 4" pipe -had it of been so and you didnt want to use the mop method,you could have put your arm in a bin -liner and lifted the stuff out into a bucket
might be of interest to janetsflower
yup landscaper this should have been a 4" pipe -had it of been so and you didnt want to use the mop method,you could have put your arm in a bin -liner and lifted the stuff out into a bucket
might be of interest to janetsflower
There's probably a bend nearby, so a broom stick wont go far and you stand a chance of ramming 'whatever it is' further down the pipe and if the pipe is what it sounds like ie a 2" waste, maybe popping off a bend, Try the water jet/hose, you never know and be patient it may take a while. I wouldnt think the 'plughole stuff' will do the trick as it will not attack dirt/mud - mainly hairs/congeled fat & slime etc....yuk!! What goes into this drain, by the way?
Thanks Landscaper, It is just purely for rainwater. One is just next to the entrance of the garage (build after house was as an extension in the garden - but not actually attached to the house) and another is next to the side of the house in the back garden near the drainpipe from the guttering.
I just can't understand how mud has gotten into them or where from? It is such a pain!!
They are not causing the garden or patio to flood or anything, just thought that we should clear them just in case... and it looks a bit manky too. :- )
I just can't understand how mud has gotten into them or where from? It is such a pain!!
They are not causing the garden or patio to flood or anything, just thought that we should clear them just in case... and it looks a bit manky too. :- )