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Reviewed in the United States on March 17, 2025
The only way this auger would operate was to hand pull-out and hand push-in the drain auger into the housing. Frustrated and disappointed. Returning.
yuriy sadovskiy
Reviewed in the United States on March 16, 2025
Very good.
Dawn M. Dobbs
Reviewed in the United States on March 13, 2025
Worked great but this is definitely, (in my opinion) is a 2 person job to use this. This thing heavy! And seems very well made also! My grandson helped me and we elected to use the "drill method". Highly recommend this! Especially if you have a clog that's close to 50 ft!! We did! :)
Richard A.
Reviewed in the United States on February 9, 2025
This 1/4" auger worked very well for me. Self-fed well when powered with an electric drill. Also retreats when spun in reverse. Goes around pretty tight bends. And has very good cleaning action. Seems well made and is relatively light.
Cheryl McGraw
Reviewed in the United States on February 28, 2025
Bought this for a clogged kitchen sink and it did not disappoint. The clog ended up being about 30ft down the pipe. There were a few smaller piles of sludge we had hoped might be the problem but it was a greasy ball of dog fur the size of a squirrel that was ultimately the culprit. We worked at the pipes (using a drill with it) for about 2 hours to get everything out and it held up fine. The gloves, while not waterproof provided excellent grip and were a big help considering the sludge. It came with instructions, but I would recommend watching a few videos about drill speed and use. It saved us a plumber bill, worth every penny!
RN
Reviewed in the United States on February 22, 2025
This drain snake is a great value. The main body is metal which is rare as most drain snakes of this type are plastic. This one is heavy duty feeling. It was easy to use and was able to route through several bends in the plumbing to clear the clog.
Wanda Weihl
Reviewed in the United States on January 9, 2025
I had a bad clog way down in kitchen sink drain. Tried everything before decided to purchase this 50’ snake. My 25’ is the same but did not reach the clog.Using this tool is exhausting and very smelly. But the best part is when you feel it break through whatever was there finally goes out to sewer or septic.The real fun begins now. Extract the cable back inside the reel. Turn on hot water and let in run for awhile make sure it flows freely out the drain pipes. Take tool outside pull cable all the way out and spray with hose full force. Takes sometime for this clean up but I feel it is a must.
James Ketcheson
Reviewed in the United States on January 12, 2025
Me and my son did our 2 inch drain yesterday ,I did have a snake but only 15 ft long,I had no idea where the stopage was .Before I started I pulled the snake out of the casing and put tape at the 25 ft mark.My son handles the unit with a drill at the end and I pulled the snake out and kept it straight with the drill spinning at low speed we hit the clog around 18 ft ,I slowly moved the snake in and out when my son controlling the drill the clog was aproxmately 6 inches long,so my son turned the drill up a little more speed to rake around the inside edges of the PVC pipe.Tomorrow I'm put a clog blaster in the pipe hooked to hot water ,it pulsates like a blaster to clean pipe out better.It hooks to the hose and swells up inside the pipe,The snake cleaned the clog Im just cleaning the left overs out and down to the street
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