Hi,

I had a plumber that we know come in today and fixe it; he was done like in 30 
seconds.
He used some type of machine that blows about 10 pounds of compressed air into 
the drain, and that did the trick.
All is draining normally now.
Now, the valves apparently weren't tightened enough, when my dad was trying to 
help fixe it, and of course, this guy didn't check that, so there is some 
leaking, when we turn on the faucet.
I've called him back, so hopefully, he can tighten up what needs tightening for 
me.

Claudia

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Darrin Porter 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Wednesday, July 01, 2009 10:46 AM
  Subject: RE: [BlindHandyMan] My Bathroom Sink!





  Dan,

  Can't believe that anyone's not mentioned this before. Many bathroom sinks, 
including both in my house have a stopper or plug arrangement that is actuated 
by a rod or lever, usually located behing the faucet. This stopper is usually 
plastic and has four fins on it (to what purpose, I don't know) just below the 
part that you can see or feel in the sink. The fins can get fouled with hair, 
soap scum, etc and cause the sink to drain slowly. Since this stopper is right 
at the base of the sink, it is above the trap. Usually, to remove the stopper 
for cleaning, you have to disassemble the lever arrangement that controls it 
and then unscrew a nut that holds the actuator to the drain pipe. After 
removing the actuator, the stopper can be lifted up out of the sink for 
cleaning.

  This sounds more complicated than it is and can, usually, be done in about 
thirty seconds or so. I've don it in a half-dozen or more sinks over the years. 
Many people have been surprised at how nasty the stopper can become. If Claudia 
or anyone else in her house washes his or her hair in the sink or if someone 
shaves regularly in the sink, that is likely the problem if, of course, she has 
that type of drain arrangement.

  Darrin

  Darrin Porter
  Senior Technical Engineer

  United Ocean Services, L.L.C.
  601 South Harbour Island Boulevard, Suite 230
  Tampa, Florida 33602
  (813) 209-4247 (office)
  (813) 744-0011 (cellular phone)
  (813) 242-4849 (fax)
  [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

  ________________________________
  From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Dan Rossi
  Sent: Tuesday, June 30, 2009 10:55 AM
  To: [email protected]
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] My Bathroom Sink!

  Claudia,

  Did you or your dad try running a snake down the drain? It sounds like he
  opened the trap but just looked around. A snake might find a real
  blockage. But, I don't understand how the water from the hose worked if
  there was a blockage. The vent stack might be the issue, but strange if
  none of the other bathroom drains are having the same issue.

  --
  Blue skies.
  Dan Rossi
  Carnegie Mellon University.
  E-Mail: [email protected]<mailto:dr25%40andrew.cmu.edu>
  Tel: (412) 268-9081

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