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Shane Hecker Shane Hecker is offline
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Default melted candle wax in drain pipes


wrote in message
...
On Sat, 5 Aug 2006 17:13:53 -0400, "EXT"
wrote:


"Tom The Great" wrote in message
. ..
On 5 Aug 2006 11:56:25 -0700, "dee" wrote:

A candle melted and leaked down into my washing machine. I thought
that I had it all removed but when I washed a load of clothes, the
draining water backed up into my tub and bathroom sink. There was red
candle wax all over the place. Needless to say now my bathroom and
washing machine drain pipes are stopped up. I've used 2 bottles of
sulfuric acid and this hasn't helped. Can anyone please tell me how to
dissolve the wax that is down in the pipes or please tell me how to fix
this problem.
Thanks


Sounds trollish.


Yes, how did a candle melt and leak down into a washing machine, then how
did the melted wax get from the washing machine into the drain? At some
point it would have solidified in place long before it got into a drain.


I was thinking the same thing. Of course people do some really stupid
things at times, and this is one of the more stupid I have heard. If
it dripped in the machine it would have solidified upon hitting the
tub bottom, and scraping it out would be required. Aside from a few
loose particles during removal, none should have gotten in the drain
pipes, unless the guy scraped it loose and expected the machine to
"eat" the scrapings. It could be a coincidense that the drain plugged
at the same time too.

I could be nasty and suggest burning the house down. The heat would
melt the wax......

But I'll be nice tonite. A hand snake or power auger is probably the
only solution. If this is on a septic tank, the tank could be plugged
too, or a sewer line is clogged.

If other fixtures work in the house, then the clog is probably local
to that machine and surrrounding fixtures.


Speaking of candle wax, what temperature does it melt at? It is a bit of a
stretch, but some machines have a sanitize cycle which brings the water to
at least 150 degrees. Some wax is designed to melt, like the small plug in a
bottle of dishwasher cleaner, which melts at 135 degrees. I've never known
anyone to have this happen to them, let alone anyone who has put a candle in
a washer, but if this is true, what a freak accident.