Whoa! I did the baking soda, and my sink immediately started gurgling and burbling up brown malodorous water. Added some salt and kept shoving it down both sinks (I’ve got a double). BOTH sinks started gurgling loudly. But she did say ‘let sit for several hours’. We’ll see what a boiling water flush does for them tomorrow morning. Fingers crossed, as I have dirty dishes to wash!! (No dishwasher yet)
Common sensei, tells me that using dish soap to clean your oven is not the right thing to do. Number one the ingredients in dish soap is petroleum it is very flammable and it is poisonous if you cannot remove it from the oven completely. You have to think outside of the box because number one your food goes in there and you don't want any chemicals that could be left behind to be able to penetrate your food it's better to go with natural ingredients like baking soda and vinegar. We know that petroleum is bad but that is what our dish soap is made of
The blue stick one worked for me. SO HAPPY!!!! After watching all the videos both here and on YT i was a little nervous concerning the negative reviews. The instructions showing how i needed to reinforced my drain pipe with a stack of books (which i did NOT do) was also rather disconcerting! Anyways I bought this for my bathroom sink. Following a sloppy renovation which left large chunks of plaster down the drain pipe some years ago (which i tried to manually clear as much as possible), over time it just started to clog more and more, so that my usual methods of physically (never chemically) unclogging not only failed but made it worse by forcing the obstruction deeper into the pipeline. I was desperate to guarantee my success so i followed the instructions carefully (except for the stack of books part, LOL). First, i unscrewed that little stopper cap over the drain and duct-taped the overflow hole. Then, i poured half a bottle of any old dishwashing liquid down the drain and left that overnight. Next day i poured a bunch of baking SODA into the drain. Followed by over 1 cup of vinegar and let that fizz & sit for awhile. Then i poured a potful of boiling water down the drain. There was a slight improvement, but it was obviously still clogged. The device required no assembly other than i had to fit my attachment of choice onto it (i used the smallest one). I pumped it up easily until there was good resistance (8 pumps was max. i could do. Don't understand these folks who seem able to pump more than that - if u can u must have gotten a defective one). I fitted the attachment snugly over the drain opening (push it all the way down so you got a good seal around the drain), make sure the water sitting in the sink is a good inch or 2 over the blue section. Pulled the trigger. This made a good POP sound, but i could see it was still clogged. So i pumped 8 times again and repeated the action. This time i could hear a fair amount of gurgling deep inside the drain until the blockage suddenly dislodged!!! I nearly cried with joy!!! I don't understand the reviewers who say the device has no power.
Buy some Armour detail supplies Hero rinseless wash for glass. Mix with distilled water (1ltr of water to 4mm of Hero) spray on squeegee off and buff to a shine with a Premium FWT microfibre towel from The Rag Company.
Interesting... What do you personally use? Back in my days we used hard wax and then polished the floor. It would last for about 1-2 months. Now I need to polish/revive my old oak floors, which are getting dull in scathes, and new dull laminate. Would appreciate your response. Thanks
@@linas5833 that’s the problem with “polish”. It requires regular maintenance and over time it builds up and actually attracts the dirt and makes the floors look terrible. If you have a good finish on your floor you should be fine and maybe a recoat once every 5 years at the most
Just about any hardware store should have them, or you can almost certainly find them on Amazon or elsewhere online. They are well worth the price. I got a small one once to fix the drain pipe of a washing maching that wouldn't drain, and it fixed the problem in seconds with no trouble at all, and no damage to the machine. Cost to me: about $12 or $13. After I used this tool the washing machine was as good as new. Another one I own made quick work of solving a bathroom sink drain that had defied solution with a liquid drain cleaner. And it only took seconds to clear whatever the obstruction was. Never again had any problem with that drain.
Just use a half bottle of dishwashing liquid, put it in your sink, let it rest for a half or 1 our and than 5 liters hot 🥵 water PROBLEM SOLVED 😎😎😎 you can do this every month to properly clean all the Sink problems 🎉🎉🎉
What are the pros and cons of each one? Also not true to say stainless is an budget option as some stainless sinks are the same price or higher than granite composite. Sounds like you read an information brochure on each one and made a video.
Drano is now garbage and doesn't do the job anymore they have made it so weak it's ridiculous and it is twice the price it used to be dont buy it's crap!