I noticed today, a particularly emphatic sign in a public restroom that requested women not to flush ANY feminine hygeine products down the toilet. I have seen these signs before and always assumed that they meant not to flush pads, wrappers, and applicators. But is it possible they really mean not to flush ANY feminine hygeine products down the toilet?
Plumbers, is there a reason why the cotton/string portion of the tampon should not be flushed?
Yes they can choke the system, yes it is also an environmental issue and yes they cause grief at the treatment works, But disposalable nappies are the absolute No1 way to stuff the system, (yes It happens a lot). It might pay you to learn how to use an electric eel you'll save a fortune.
All personal hygeine products cause problems for your own plumbing and/or for the centralized waste disposal facilitys. Every thing coming in has to be reduced to a slurry for effective treatment. String, plastic sheeting, and wads of cotton like material are difficult to chop up. Such stuff is usually caught on a bar grate for removal.
Proper disposal at the source simplifies operations for all involved in disposal.
:smack: I didn’t answer the question.
An electric eel is a motorized version of the plumbers snake.
Snakes may be a very long spring with a spiral hook on the end or a flat steel tape. Either one is pushed into the blocked pipe to attempt removal or loosening the obstruction so the waste water can flow freely.
Have you heard of “Rotor Rooter?” They clean out tree roots that have grown into the sewer pipe and form a mass of roots.
There are also hydraulic snakes that use high pressure water to clear obstructions and flush out the pipes.
There may be a new product on the market ala the flushable toilet scrub brush, made of a disintegrable paper? material.
The warning is for the benefit of those who may be using non-flushable products.
It’s not the plumbers either. The more calls the merrier (profitable) for them1
I was talking to a Civil Engineering troop the other day. He’s a plumber on the enlisted payroll. He said that tampons are the number one thing that causes toilet clogs. I asked him if he brought along a little aquarium net to fish the plugs out.
A plumber once told me not to flush dental floss. Said that the string tends to wind up around the paper, etc. and can cause lots of problems. From that info, I take it that the main problem with flushing tampons is the problem with the strings. (Boy, it’s hard to enter this conversation without some sort of wise-ass comment) xo C.
The “tree roots” mentioned by a previous poster are a pretty good reason not to flush anything that doesn’t biodegrade very quickly. Tree roots will easily penetrate the old clay sewer pipes and act as a strainer. At a previous house, I was upstream (sewer pipe-wise) from a house containing three or four women occupants. The feminine products got tangled up in tree roots and caused a blockage, resulting in geyser-like activity in all the plumbing fixtures upstream of the block.
Landlady here. Tampons are our absolute number one cause of sewer line trouble! They get tangled up in tree roots, or just expand, blocking the pipe. Thankfully, I guess, there are usually rinsed white by the time our plumber deals with them. But they are most certainly NOT flushable, no matter what the box says.
As an aside, the last time I was up in my hometown of Racine, WI, and went down to a beach on the shores of Lake Michigan to take a walk, there were hundreds of pink or white plastic applicators littering the sand. The beach was close to the wastewater treatment plant. Ewww…
Flushing dental floss is also a big no-no, as has been previously noted here.