Make us your homepage



  Top100  


  Classifieds  


  News  


  Help  


  Contacts  

Search: 

 



News

News category


Unclogging a toilet

24.08.2008 22:02 Home - Source: Home Envy

Mag plunging her heart out

Opera is usually associated with the shower, but sometimes opera moves out of the shower and over to the toilet. A clogged toilet has many qualities of an opera; it's dramatic and there's screaming.

It's critical for every modern human to know how to stop a cascading toilet and dislodge the lurking clog.

Maybe you remember the first time a toilet backed up on you. I do. I was at Auntie Brace's cottage. I was eleven. I flushed, but something didn't sound right. I looked in the bowl. The water level was too high and worse, it was climbing. I made a quick decision. I closed the lid.

Now, if I had been a smart kid I would have walked away and let somebody else be the hero. But no, I was curious. I lifted the lid and looked again. (And so began a lifelong habit of always checking the bowl, a habit I'm secretly proud of, since most people who use the bathrooms in movie theatres NEVER look. 'Zup with that?

That day at Auntie Brace's cottage when I took my second peek, the water had stopped a quarter inch shy of the top of the bowl. That's when I made my huge mistake. I flushed again. I still feel bad about that. Where did I think the new water was going to go?

I know now. All over my sneakers, across the bathroom floor and out into the hall. My secret was quickly becoming public. There were nine of us staying at this cottage. I grabbed the plunger and thrust it into the bowl. Displaced water surged onto my sneakers but I didn't care now. I was in the white heat of a plumbing fiasco.

I wailed on that plunger like I was doing CPR on a camel. After six or seven stabs there was a sucking sound and all the standing water disappeared (except for the water I was standing in).

So, it is with the still-stinging humility of an 11-year-old potty flooder that I offer the following advice to toilet users everywhere.

Purging a Clog

  1. Vigilantly observe the toilet bowl as you flush. If the whirlpool of swirling bowl contents looks sluggish and the water rises in an ominous way that makes your Levator Ani muscles clench, you have a problem.
  2. Swiftly remove the lid from your toilet tank. TIP: This is faster if you don't store 400 hair care products on your toilet tank lid.
  3. Stop the water flowing into the toilet bowl by reaching into the tank and pushing the stopper down so it's seated firmly on the flush valve outlet (i.e. pop the plug back on the hole). The stopper is usually located in the dead center of the tank floor. It's attached by a chain or wire to the flush lever. You can't miss it.
  4. Calmly hum the bawdy tavern ditty "Slap the Flapper Back Down Boys" while holding the stopper until the tank starts to refill.
  5. Put on opera music. I do my best plunging to Puccini's "Firenze è come un albero fiorito" - jaunty, yet short, so the goal is to finish before it does.
  6. Put on rubber gloves, spread some newspaper around to catch the backsplash, and hoist your plunger.
  7. Straddle the toilet bowl, especially if your upper body strength is under-maintained. With your centre of gravity directly over the plunger you have more oomph. TIP: The water level in the bowl should cover the plunger's cup. If it doesn't, bring the water level up by flushing again, but be prepared to plunge like a piston in a hopped-up muscle car.
  8. Bend your knees and sharply depress the plunger. You will hear the 'boomph' of a pocket of air jamming into the line. Keep hammering rhythmically on the plunger to build up pressure in the pipe. Repeat the plunging motion rapidly at least ten times, or until the water disappears with an enthusiastic sucking sound.

Tip

It would be good to give these techniques a dry run, as it were, on a day when your plumbing is stable and cooperative. Your toilet is a fascinating portrait of physics at work. Explore your tank. You'll be glad you did.

  Add comment

Name: 
E-Mail: 
Comment: 
Enter code: 



« November 2008
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
     12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930

Last added news

Clipped inspirations 13.11.2008 02:00 Hands-on time: Less than an hour.Total time: Add a couple of hours for paint to dry.Skill: Super easy.Project cost: Less than $12.

How do I insulate beneath a bay window? 13.11.2008 02:00 Q: How should I insulate a cold floor underneath a bay window that juts over my open front porch? I've removed all the old wood covering the underside of the floor frame, and I have a clean slate. What's the best way to preserve and seal this space so the bay window up above is warm?

Season 2: Project #50 Rack of ages 06.11.2008 00:00 A Euro-style plate rack adds kitchen panache This smart little plate rack is just a bunch of dowels and some trim. But what kills is getting the design right.

French chic frames 06.11.2008 00:00 Hands-on time: Less than two hoursTotal time: Plus 45 minutes drying time for acrylic paint and four hours for varnishSkill: EasyCost: Less than $10 a frame Materials and ToolsRound frameSandpaper and tack clothSilver acrylic paintPaint tray and brushesSemigloss varnishCardboardScissorsPencilFabric...

Why is water dripping from underneath my eaves? 06.11.2008 00:00 Q: Why is water dripping from underneath my eaves? There's no leakage in the attic or living quarters, but I'm concerned. The leaks happened when warm weather melted snow on the roof. A: The water dripping from your soffit is a definite warning sign.

Canopy beds give you sweet dreams 30.10.2008 05:01 This handsome British colonial style bed with its barley twist posts needs little further embellishment.Long an essential fixture in fairytales and girlhood fantasies - the canopy bed embodies the very spirit of romance.

Creepy stone castings 30.10.2008 05:01 Hands-on time: 2 hours.Total time: Add 48 hours curing time.Skill: Easy and kid-friendly with adult supervision.Cost estimate: Under $14.00. Materials & ToolsHalloween mold (skeleton, ghost, Frankenstein, etc.

Is it possible to paint ceramic tiles? 30.10.2008 05:01 Q: Help! How do I get rid of a sticky mess that's all over my house? I tried to paint the ceramic tiles on my bathroom floor, beginning with a shellac-based primer. It looked beautiful, but as soon as the floor got damp, the paint peeled off in big sheets on bare feet.

Low-flow toilet performance 22.10.2008 02:00 Q: Do you still like the low-flow toilets you installed at your place? I came across an old column of yours where you describe this technology and how to install it. I have two toilets in my house of unknown vintage and I’m looking to replace them.

Steps to removing textured ceiling 14.10.2008 01:04 The woman's voice was confident and friendly. "You have no fibres." I felt elated, even euphoric. This wasn't a medical call. It was Nancy Clark at McMaster University's Occupational and Environmental Health Laboratory. I'd recently sent the lab a sample of ceiling scrapings from our guest bedroom.

All news | News archive | RSS feed

Home    |    Add your site    |    Member login    |    Lost id    |    Contact Us    |    Help   |    Advertise    |    Privacy Policy

© Top100biz Inc., 2004-2005. This site is powered by AlphaStoreDesign.com