scott, I dispise the water saving unit we have. first as it is to 
short and from time to time we need to dump down a few mop buckets of 
water.  furthermore it   I am told it is not made of the better 
quality  chinet or whatever you call it. I've a minde to build a wide 
board    outhouse within 36 inches of my neighbors house which I am 
told is brown anyway. good luck with  whatever happens. Lee

On 
Mon, Jul 06, 2009 at 08:26:04AM -0400, 
Scott Howell wrote:
> Hey Lee. Well no one has put anything down there and to be honest it  
> is a water-saving model and has not really worked right since we moved  
> in. I neglected to point out that I have poured different things in  
> there such as warm water etc. I'm absolutely sure there is no  
> blockage, but perhaps I should take another shot at snaking it. See I  
> have another twelet that is a water-saving model and it behaves  
> perfectly. THe idea of the defect came from a plumber I  spoke to, but  
> seemed one of those things that could be possible, but thought I'd  
> seek other input before I considered pulling the thing out. I don't  
> know how hard it would be to fix the trap if it were a case of an  
> extra projection is in the trap. If it could be filed out or  
> something, then maybe pulling and repairing it would be the least  
> costly option, but then maybe since the trap is glazed, filing any  
> imperfection could result in other problems.
> 
> tnx,
> 
> On Jul 6, 2009, at 7:36 AM, Lee A. Stone wrote:
> 
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Might I suggest using a mop pail and start out with some warm water.
> > dumping it down the toilet and working up to a hot water straight.
> > dumping it down. after a few pails then if it is not going down right
> > you consider another problem. is there small children in the house who
> > might have accidentally dumped in a toy or toothbrush? something like
> > that? did this toilet ever work correctly? and last lay is it a water
> > saving unit? Lee
> >
> > -- 
> > When the only tool you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look
> > like a nail.
> > .
> >
> > 
> 
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> 

-- 
When the only tool you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look
like a nail.
.

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