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๐ฟ Clear your pipes, save your wallet โ the proโs secret weapon!
The Sewer Jetter Kit 100FT by West Bay is a professional-grade drain cleaning solution featuring a 100-foot thermoplastic polyester hose rated for 5800 PSI. Equipped with three specialized nozzles (button nose, rotating, and corner) and quick-connect fittings, it delivers powerful, versatile jetting to clear tough blockages efficiently. Complete with essential accessories like spanners and watertight tape, this kit transforms your pressure washer into a high-performance sewer cleaning system, saving costly plumber visits and empowering DIY maintenance.









| ASIN | B085WJ4GWG |
| Best Sellers Rank | #9,303 in Patio, Lawn & Garden ( See Top 100 in Patio, Lawn & Garden ) #78 in Pressure Washer Accessories |
| Brand | West Bay |
| Brand Name | West Bay |
| Color | Black |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 2,939 Reviews |
| Item Dimensions L x W | 1200"L x 0.48"W |
| Item Length | 100 Feet |
| Item Weight | 2.95 Kilograms |
| Manufacturer | West Bay |
| Material | Pearl, Polyester |
| Material Type | Pearl, Polyester |
| Maximum Pressure | 11000 Pound per Square Inch |
| Nominal Wall Thickness | >0.5 inches |
| Outside Diameter | 0.48 Inches |
| Product Dimensions | 1200"L x 0.48"W |
| UPC | 658906651743 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
D**O
Save your self a bucket ton of $$$$ and buy this!
so, I had a blockage in my main sewer line and hired a plumber to come over to clear it. Once itโs done, he put the camera down and showed me how clogged and dirty the main line was. Offered to clean the main sewer pipes for around $700. Of course I declined, I went to Amazon and did a little research and found this product. I hooked it up to my power washer, no issues, ran it down my main sewer line for the cleanout, got everything nice and squeaky clean. Took me about an hour, so after purchasing this I paid myself an hourly rate of $650!!! Highly recommended, this is very inexpensive and if you have a power washer, you need this kit to throw in your garage. I can use this again and again, you could even use this to unclog the toilet, I suppose, but itโs mainly made for cleaning out a main sewer line. The fact that the jets push water behind, it actually pulls itself through the lines and does a really great job. Once again, Amazon for the win!
K**.
Worked As It Should
Worked great. I already had a pressure washer. Recommend if you routinely have to hire a company to flush out the plumbing. Saved me $400 on service call. Wish I had thought about it years ago!
C**R
It's pretty good but has several limitations.
It's a good self contained kit with all the parts even wrenches, actually bought it to try and clean culverts, haven't gotten to that but will let you know after. So on the good side, have a 3800 psi 2.6 gpm pressure washer. It has cleared three blockages so far. It won't cut tree roots, so that's a whole other thing. The picture shows them putting it down a toilet, you cannot do that don't try. It won't actually make a 90 turn in anything smaller than 4" pipe I've found. If you want to better out from the toilet, you need to pull the toilet off. That's the reason I took a star off, I'm actually looking for a swivel of some sort to try and make those corners. The hose kinks almost constantly unless you string it out, then make big loops to hold it, even then it's easier to just string it out flat. If you put it on a hose real that would work even better. But if the hose was more stiff it wouldn't make the corners it does. I wouldn't try to push with no pressure on it because of how soft it is, if you put pressure to it it will pull itself and the pressure makes the hose stiff enough to push. So outside of the not making corners thing, I'd say it's a great tool. It will not replace an actual plumber, but it can buy you some time before they can perform the larger projects, or help you find where your major blockage is to dig for repairs.
J**N
Got the job done.
6 inch sewage drain, 135 foot, this was a slow drain issue not completely plugged. Got the sewer jetter today, everything needed besides the pressure washer was included. I am using a 3200 psi pressure washer. Hose looked like good quality and end fittings looked good, worked good, and held up to a beating. Started working the hose into the pipe. The hose is not made the be pushed on. Pulled the trigger on pressure washer and the nozzle started pulling the hose into the drain. I started with the front spray and two rear spray nozzle. About 50 feet in hit some blockage, slowly pulled the hose out a foot let it take it back in a foot a few times and we made it past the first blockage. Continued down the pipe, came across second blockage at about 75 feet, repeated moving it back and forth, no luck. Pulled hose, changed nozzle to the on that has one front spray three rear spray. Back at 75 foot mark and a few minutes later working down further in the pipe second blockage cleared. About 125 feet in hit another blockage worked it for about 10 minutes, nothing, couldn't get through. Time for the third nozzle, the spinning one. Let me tell you when I pulled the trigger on this one you could hear it working. It was like a plane taking off, spinning very fast. This one pulled the hose into the pipe much faster then the other two. Back at the 125 foot mark 2 - 3 minutes later was past the blockage. Sewage line completely cleared at this point no back up at all. Went a little further and I think I was in the city sewer. Now comes a problem, when I started pulling it back out it was stuck I moved it around turned water on and off nothing. It's not coming out. Pulling much harder on the line then I should be working it back and forth for 20 minutes, nothing, its not coming out. Took a break and put a garden hose in the sewer pipe to run water through it to clean out anything left over. Came back 10 minutes later and said ok let's get this sewer jetter out of the sewer pipe. Pulled it one time and it came right out???? Idk if it was the water from the garden hose running down there or what happened but a sigh of relief. Worked the sewer jetter back and forth through the pipe 5 - 6 times and called it a completed job. All and all I would recommend this product, much better then having to spend $450 to have someone snake my line. Now I have the tool to fix it if it ever happens again.
R**Y
Messy Job Made Easy
My house has a septic system that has gone without proper care for a while, so part of the cleanup process involved scouring out as much as I could with my pressure washer and this jetting kit as well as seeding it with some RidX and a few other treatments. It was simple enough to attach to my pressure washer, and long enough to clean all the way from the access point, to the tank about 30 feet away. I prepared by crafting a "portal" out of some sheets of plastic and a contractors bag. I zip tied these over the open end of the septic access point, and cut a small hole just enough for the hose to fit in. I would recommend doing this or something similar as well, because pressure washers also displace a lot of air, and if your entry point for your septic system is an open hole, turning that pressure washer on without some sort of shielding will almost certainly cover you in a blanket of your family's most foul material. I'm glad I thought of it first, and I promise you will be too. I then fed the entire length of the line into the sewer, and did two sets of about 20 minutes each slowly going back and forth the entire length of the pipe, and swapping out the tips partway through. The tips seem good enough to lift a lot of the heavily stuck on matter, however I didn't really use the spinning one, as I was worried that the tradeoff would be less pushing power at the nozzle tip. That being said, the nozzles work as well as I could tell without crawling in and inspecting up close. I know a lot of material was cleared out, enough to ensure there are no impending blockages for the foreseeable future. Afterwards, I soaked the hose and bits in a tote full of disinfectant. I think these work great for what I needed, and would probably excel in other similar plumbing environments. If you have the means and are comfortable doing it, it will definitely save you the money and headache.
D**.
Definitely worth trying
I recently found that my septic drain field wasn't draining and if I hadn't been out doing my biannual septic maintenance, by the next day we would have had sewage in the house. I quickly called a septic company and had the tank pumped the same day (hadn't pumped it in almost 10 years). Told me that an attempt to clear the drain field would cost $2500 - $3500. To clear it, not replace it. I didn't know about the distribution box, septic guy told me about it, so I quickly dug it up and got it open. Water was almost over the top of the inlet pipe. Ordered a bunch of chemicals (and got some from my local big box store) but also ordered this. Used it today and feel very confident that once my tank fills back up, it's going to drain properly. I have two pipes (corrugated) running from the distribution box to the drain field. There are 3 spray heads in the kit. A "bottle nose", a "mushroom head" and a spinning one. Directions are mostly pictures, for the wording, English is clearly not their native language so it wasn't clear to me the difference between the bottle head and the mushroom head. I think the difference is the bottle head is a little more focused spray while the mushroom head is a little less. I started with the bottle head, then moved to the mushroom head, then the spinning head for each pipe. The hose does tangle up and kink easy. It's a high pressure hose, just like your PW hose, guess it's how they work. I stretched it out across my property and let it relax, that helped but you definitely have to watch it, it will wrap it self around itself quickly. On the first pipe, I got about 17' and it hit a clog (I wrapped some of the teflon tape around the hose where it stopped, then pulled it out and walked it off to measure). Worked it and worked it and finally got past it, then it stops around 36' (I think this is the length of the pipes). On the second pipe, I got about 5' and it stopped. I couldn't get past it until I switched to the mushroom head and finally got past it and also got to 36' before it stopped. Water definitely seems to be flowing better now. We cut down on our water usage big time to save time before the tank filled back up, so I could get this done as well as get chemicals in but from the water I put in it from this tool and also a hose, it definitely is draining much better. If you have someone to help, it's much easier and you can use the attachment to your pressure washer gun. My PW is 3100 psi btw. You can do it yourself, one hand feeding the hose into the pipe while the other pulls the trigger but MUCH easier with a second person. You don't have to use the gun, there's an attachment so you can connect the hose directly to your PW but being that I was interchanging the heads, it was much easier to have my helper (wife) let go of the trigger while I changed the head. Otherwise you'll have to shut off your PW and the water, change the head, then start everything back up. I ran each head through each pipe at least twice and ended up shoveling and hand pulling a lot of sediment back out of the distribution box (good set of cleaning gloves is recommended). The heads literally pull the hose through the pipes. I have no idea of the actual layout of the pipes but they must have a minimum of a 45 degree bend, if not more, in order to leave the distribution box and go out to the drain field. Besides hitting the clogged areas, there was no problem getting the hose in there, like I said, it pulls itself through it. I had been putting in copper sulphate once to twice a year, originally just flushing it down the toilet like the instructions explain but later, after learning that's basically just throwing it away due to dilution, using a pvc pipe to angle into the pipe that feeds into the distribution box and pouring it into the pipe and chasing it with a water hose. The septic guy said I should be doing that monthly! Geez. He also pointed out some plants, I think they're called Lacy Tree Philodendron, that I had all around the septic system that the original owner had planted and said they were the worst thing for septic systems. Can't believe I never thought of it because these things are basically root systems with leaves! The next day I cut them out with my chain saw and hatchet. I ordered a 50lb bag of copper sulphate powder from Wally World and put a bunch into each pipe, via the distrubtion box, and chased it with the water hose. Once my other chemicals get here (concentrated bacteria really), I'll do the same thing. I'm also going to try and find a solution to where I can much more easily access the distribution box, vs having to dig it up everytime. Long story short, ordering this system is a whole lot cheaper than paying someone else and even if I could only use it once (which I can clearly use it multiple times), it would be worth it.
A**R
No on/off valve, must be connected directly to your pressure washer
I gave it 3 stars but in the interest of fairness I was trying to unblock a 4" dry well line that was probably unrescueable to begin with. I bought this as a last resort before facing a large repair bill for my septic system. Because it has no on/off valve I initially connected to my pressure washer's wand thinking I could easily trigger the flow. That worked briefly then promptly blew out my pressure washers hose. Thank goodness for Amazon. The head also clog and the pins provided offered some help but it took me about 15 mins to get the obstruction out of the head. I then connected it directly to my PW and it seemed to provide a pressurized stream on the business end of the hose. By the way, the hose easily kinked especially in the hot sun. I would conclude that this might be a good resource for smaller pipes and smaller problems. It was ineffective for my purposes. This was a one-time Hail Mary for me so I doubt I will ever use it again.
C**H
Works like a champ!!!
This has to be the best $42 I've spent in a long time.. works perfectly as intended!!!
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