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Washing Machine Drain Clogged -

If water still backs up, the clog is deep in your plumbing. Feed a 25-foot drum auger into the standpipe. Crank slowly until you feel resistance. That’s the sludge plug. Break it, retract, and run a rinse cycle to test. The One Thing You Should Never Do Do not pour liquid drain cleaner (Drano, Liquid-Plumr) into a washing machine drain.

A washing machine drain clog isn’t just an inconvenience; it’s a water damage risk and a sign that your machine is literally choking on its own waste. Before you call a plumber for an emergency Sunday visit, let’s diagnose the problem, fix it, and prevent it from happening again. Not all clogs are created equal. Depending on where the water stops moving, the fix changes. Here is where to look: washing machine drain clogged

Locate the drain filter (usually bottom right or behind the front panel). Clean it out. Nine times out of ten, this solves the problem. If water still backs up, the clog is deep in your plumbing

Don’t run the pump with a full tub; you’ll burn out the motor. Use a bucket or a wet/dry vacuum to remove the standing water from the drum. That’s the sludge plug

You hear it from the laundry room: the washing machine isn’t singing its usual end-of-cycle jingle. Instead, it’s making a thump-thump-thump sound, followed by a desperate, watery gasp. You open the lid to find your clothes sitting in a murky, soapy swamp.

If the filter is clean but the water still drains slowly, pour one gallon of boiling water (carefully!) mixed with one cup of white vinegar directly down the standpipe. Wait 10 minutes. The heat and acid dissolve soap scum.

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