This might work for things like hotel, hospital, public toilets where it seems more sanitary as it’s containing the water within but for home use, a regular plunger is best
And then you just have dookie pieces and water festering on it causing your bathroom to smell like a pig trough. It's unhygienic and doing it that way is much easier
I mean, how often do you really need a plunger anyways, you can just stuff a couple sheets of these under the bathroom sink and you're covered for years
You ever try to get one of those new plastic packages open without a box cutter the same thing very strong you clean the toilet edge with alcohol first and adhesive is like duct tape
It looks good in all but the original laundry you can keep or mini years and just change the stick if it ever breaks, put a pole in it if you wanted to, but that was pretty nifty
Imagine you’re doing that because your toilet was clogged by an ungodly amount of diharrea and the plastic rips causing your arm to go right through 💀💀
@@davesargent7304 A plunger is made of way more resources than this plastic seal. I bet most people replace a plunger more often than they use enough of these to catch up.
I wonder if he had these chilling for like a month or two waiting on the perfect moment Or if he just wadded a bunch of toilet paper up and clogged it that way The first way is funnier
I think it just be more affordable just to have an actual toilet plunger because now that's just one more thing that I have to stock up in the house and buy more of it