this post was submitted on 12 Oct 2024
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Drain cleaners work from long exposure on a blockage. You wouldn't want to handle a chemical that could dissolve all that hair and bio buildup by pouring it through a slow drain because if it splashed on your skin it'd burn through your skin in the same time.
Manual removal is always best. If you want to be proactive, get a long test-tube brush and put it down the drain periodically so you don't have to disassemble the drain.
It's disgusting, but it's satisfying to take it apart and give it the old toothbrush like you suggested from time to time.
This is pretty fast, took 15 minutes and I was really cleaning it.
They make plastic zip tie like things just for this. No brush to clean or spatter stuff when you pull it out.
It's not that big of a deal. I've gotten strait lye and sulphuric acid all over my hands, many times. Rinse off quickly, no problem. Especially with sulphric acid. I forget the chemistry term, but it has a sort of affinity with water, instantly dilutes.
Either way, you're going to notice every paper cut you got.
Next time I get a clog, and assuming cleaning doesn't work, I'm getting a hose attachment. Probably would have saved me $200 from the plumber.