30" milk snake Answer is.... Erm Yes. But only on flush 2
Yes you can put it down the toilet, as long as you flush it. And no it's very unlikely to come back alive.
because there is a Dukie stuck in the bottom of the toilet so you have to take out your toilet and flush the system.
Go to the toilet, flush it 3 times and come back.
There's a leak in the pipe.
If your plunger is left in the bowl. :) Since I've been snaking out toilets for many years I come to the conclusion that when a toilet doesn't flush right, the reason is like lightening and it never strikes the same reason twice. So your problem of your toilet not flushing smooth can be a million different problems but 90% of those problems are in the toilet bowl trap. If you plunge and snake the toilet and it still wont flush right then pull the toilet and look at the drain and if its clear then your problem is still the toilet which since china makes stuff so cheap , its almost cheaper to buy a new toilet then to buy the repair kit for your old one, in fact to have me repair your toilet and to have me install a new toilet with buying the toilet would be about the same price so almost everyone gets a new toilet and we live happily ever after.
If it is full, you can't put more in it, full is full. Flush the toilet, it is going to come up in the shower. == == == == == ==
Because the passageways in the toilet that carry the water from the tank to the bowl are, umm, 'full of air' (for lack of a better term). The water rushes from the tank into the bowl to flush, but all the air is in the way, so you see some come out of the siphon. That's as simple as I can make it.
Probably not; hopefully it was not alive when it was placed in the toilet in the first place
The toilet role is in the kisosk at the swimming pool. There is a guy there. Talk to him and he will tell u to come back the next day. So when u come back it will be up on a changing thingy. :)
1- It may be a Kohler (IMHO)=2- Improperly installed=3- someone put something in that DID NOT come out of their body naturally=4- undersized waste or vent==5- not enough volume in the flush to remove solids=
I am assuming you mean the flush toilet bowl. This is not as easy to answer as one might think. I would love to say, "1889," however this would be totally off the mark. Click on the related links section (Wikipedia) indicated below for a surprising history of the flush toilet. Excuse me, but I have to go the the rest room.
Your ballcock is comming on -- replace tank ball or sometimes you have to change out flush valve -- but change tank ball first and see if that will do it You hardly ever have to change flush valve -- Your ballcock is what lets water come into your tank