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Plumbers’ insider hack: Clear blocked drains instantly for peanuts!
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foam-au-3 advertorial Spotless loo in seconds 4.9 | 2,864 Reviews No more grubby dunnies Works from the very first second Safe for the family and pets Cutting-edge science Check Availability Plumber spills the beans: What’s lurking in the pipes behind your loo is stuff no one wants to see — and it’s the real reason your dunny keeps blocking up He’s fixed over 15,000 toilets. What he finds down the drain is enough to make even a seasoned pro’s stomach turn. Now he’s revealing why most blockages don’t just happen out of the blue — and how a clever cleaning powder fixes the problem where no tool can reach. Advertorial: Kylie Watts | published 3 days ago With years on the tools in the plumbing industry, he knows exactly what builds up deep in the pipework. The real culprits stay hidden for ages, slowly growing. He explains why the usual DIY tricks often only provide a band-aid fix and how a specific cleaning solution knocks out even the toughest gunk from the inside out. The gross truth your plumber never tells you Your toilet looks clean? The porcelain’s sparkling? No pong? Then take a closer look. Or better yet: look where you can’t see. Right behind your loo starts a pipe system you never lay eyes on. A dark, damp labyrinth of drains, bends, and junctions. And that’s exactly where something is going down that most people never notice their whole lives — until it’s too late. Until one day, the dunny won’t flush. Bruce Miller knows this better than anyone. The master plumber from Parramatta has fixed over 15,000 clogged toilets in 28 years. Family homes, hotels, offices, aged care facilities. „People call me up and say: ‚The toilet’s blocked all of a sudden.‘ But that’s almost never the truth. A toilet doesn’t just block overnight. The problem builds up over months and years. Deep in the pipes where you can’t see it or smell it — until the damage is done.“ What’s actually happening in your pipes (and why you’re oblivious) Every time you flush, water moves through your pipes. Fair enough. But what few people realise is: Not everything makes it all the way down. With every flush, a paper-thin layer stays behind on the inside walls. Fat, limescale, soap scum, organic waste, cellulose from toilet paper. On its own, it’s nothing. But over weeks and months, this layer hardens into a thick, sticky sludge. Bruce calls it the „Biofilm Armour.“ „Think of your pipes like arteries. And this biofilm is like cholesterol. It builds up layer by layer. Slowly. Invisibly. And eventually, the pipe is so choked up that nothing can get through. “ And here’s where it gets proper revolting: This biofilm isn’t just dirt. It’s a living ecosystem of bacteria, fungi, and microbes. In your average toilet drain pipe, there are more bacteria per square centimetre than on a public toilet seat. And the worst part: When you scrub your loo — with Harpic, bleach, tabs, or the brush — you’re only cleaning the porcelain. The visible surface. The pipes behind it? You can’t reach them. Not with a brush. Not with a gel. Not with a tab. You’re cleaning the front door while the rats are breeding in the basement. The 3 phases of a pipe blockage (and why Phase 1 and 2 are invisible) Bruce explains how a blockage actually comes to life: Phase 1: The invisible build-up (Months 1-12) Biofilm starts sticking to the walls. Thin as a film. Invisible. Odourless. Your toilet works like a charm. You don’t notice a thing. But: The pipe’s diameter is already shrinking. From 100mm to 90mm. Then 80mm. Without a sound. Phase 2: The first warning signs (Months 12-24) The water drains a bit slower. Sometimes it gurgles. Occasionally, a nasty pong wafts up — especially when it’s a scorcher outside. Most people think: „She’ll be right.“ Or they chuck some drain cleaner down. The drain cleaner eats the top layer. The biofilm underneath? Stays put. The smell comes back after a fortnight. Phase 3: The blockage (sudden, but predictable) The pipe is now so narrow that a single clump of toilet paper, a wet wipe, or a solid „delivery“ blocks the remaining gap. The water rises. Panic. Plunger. Emergency plumber on a Sunday night. $250 to $550. „And then I tell people: This didn’t have to happen. If you’d cleaned the pipes regularly — not the toilet, the pipes — this never would’ve occurred. „ Why standard cleaners don't fix the problem (and often make it worse) Bruce has seen it all in 28 years. And he’s got a clear take on the usual methods: Loo cleaners & Bleach: „They clean the porcelain. Full stop. The liquid just rushes through the pipes when you flush; it has no ‚hang time‘. The biofilm in the pipes isn’t even touched. „ Chemical drain cleaners (Drano etc.): „They’re aggressive, sure. They melt the top layer. But the biofilm that’s been there for months is so stuck that even caustic soda won’t shift it. And worst of all: these chemicals eat your pipes. „ The Plunger: „Works for light stuff. But it just shoves the clog further down. The biofilm stays. The next blockage is a deadset certainty. „ The Snake: „Drills a hole through the blockage. Right. But the biofilm on the walls? A snake won’t touch it. You’re just drilling a tunnel through the muck instead of clearing it. „ Emergency Plumber: „Of course I’ll fix it. But for $350 a pop. I tell every customer: I’m happy to come, but if you looked after your pipes, you’d never have to call me again. „ The discovery that made Bruce skeptical — then won him over „A mate of mine from Perth told me about this cleaning powder. You tip it in the loo and the foam crawls into the pipes by itself. Dissolves the biofilm. Clears blockages. No tools.“ Bruce laughed. „I’ve been on the tools for 28 years. If there was a miracle cure like that, I would’ve heard about it.“ His mate sent him a video. Bruce saw how the powder turned into a thick foam on contact with water, expanding down into the pipe. After 20 minutes: a clear drain. Without lifting a finger. „I watched that video three times. Then I placed an order.“ The product: FizzClean . Why FizzClean gets the job done when everything else is a fizzer FizzClean isn’t your average runny liquid cleaner. It’s a concentrated powder packed with special micro-foam technology. And that’s where the magic happens: Liquid cleaners just take the path of least resistance — they rush straight down, barely touching the pipe walls. FizzClean foam expands — it actually pushes itself against the pipe walls. As soon as the powder hits the water, it creates millions of microscopic bubbles. This foam actively grows to fill the entire pipe — a full 360 degrees, wall to wall. It doesn’t just sit on the surface; it crawls into every nook, cranny, and bend in the plumbing. It goes where no brush, no snake, and no liquid drain-o could ever dream of reaching. What happens in those 20 minutes: Step 1: The foam wraps the biofilm. The micro-bubbles press against the walls, surrounding that years-old gunk from every single angle. Step 2: Enzymes break it down from the inside out. The formula contains specially designed enzymes that dissolve organic build-up — fat, limescale, hair, and bacterial colonies — at a molecular level. The biofilm is literally eaten away from the inside. Step 3: The foam carries it all away. When you flush, the foam takes all that dissolved muck and bacteria with it. What’s left behind is a clean, clear pipe at its full original diameter. The result: You haven’t just cleared today’s blockage — you’ve deleted the biofilm that was going to cause the next one. Your pipes end up as clean as the day the house was built. The "Ick" factor: Your pipes are a breeding ground for nasty bugs Here’s the bit that’ll really make your skin crawl. That biofilm isn’t just a plumbing issue; it’s a massive hygiene hazard. „Aussie homeowners scrub their loos every day,“ says Bruce Miller. „The porcelain is gleaming. But right behind it, in the pipe, there’s a centimetre-thick layer of bacteria. And every time you flush, microscopic particles from that biof…
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