You’re on the job and have successfully cleared a drain. There’s just one problem. Now the snake you pulled out of that drain could use a cleaning. You don’t want the drain contents to potentially deteriorate your equipment when it’s not in use, or to deal with any accompanying smells for that matter. Here’s how to handle that second phase of cleaning.Tom Pranka, president of Spartan Tool, suggests using a sponge or similar material on the cable while retracting it.“Something of that nature that won’t get caught in the helixes of the cable but can be dabbed along the edges
How To Keep Your Jetter Clean and Rust-Free
Your jetter snake is filthy, and it’s stinking up your van. Don’t show up with a jetter caked with who-knows-what from your last customer’s drain.
Nov 03, 2014
| by Kyle Rogers |














