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Water jetters are an essential tool for drain cleaning professionals. Whether you are working with an electric water jetter in a residential kitchen or using a trailer-mounted jetter, jetting is a go-to solution for tackling grease, sludge and soft blockages.

This guide covers the fundamentals of water jetting equipment for contractors, from sewer jetter hose movement to cold-weather protection, so you get faster results and protect your gear.

Before you fire up your jetter and dive into your next job, here are proven best practices that improve results, extend the life of your equipment, and help you avoid costly mistakes.

Identify the right tool for each job with waterjetting equipment

Jetters are highly effective for clearing grease, sand, sludge and even ice. When you suspect a root intrusion, start with a traditional cable machine and follow up with a jetter and an inspection camera.

When you are not sure what is causing the clog, use your experience. Lines from restaurants, multi-family housing, or industrial kitchens are likely packed with grease. Lines from factories or industrial settings may be full of sludge, oil or sand. Make an educated guess and pick your tool accordingly.

When to jet and when to cable

Use a water jet drain cleaner machine for grease, sludge, fine sand, and ice. Start with a cable machine for roots or solid objects you must cut or retrieve. Finish with the jetter to clean the pipe wall and carry debris downstream. Confirm with a quick camera pass.

How to move a sewer jetter hose for the best cleaning results

For efficient cleaning with water jetting equipment, the hose should stay in motion. The strongest cleaning action happens on the pull-back. A simple technique is to push about 2 feet in and pull 1 foot back in a steady rhythm.

Do not let the hose remain in one spot. Pausing can create a vortex behind the nozzle that draws in debris and may trap your hose. A smooth in-and-out cadence keeps water cutting, lifts material off the wall, and prevents hang-ups.

Choosing the correct sewer jetter hose size for waterjetting efficiency

Are you using the correct size hose for the pipe you are trying to clear? Another way to get your hose stuck in the pipe is by using the wrong size. When working with high-pressure water, use the largest hose that will reasonably fit the drain. A larger inside diameter reduces friction loss through the hose. With less loss, you preserve pressure and flow at the nozzle, which makes the job easier and faster.

Line size (ID)Recommended jetter hose approachTypical nozzle choiceCommon materials
1.5 to 2 inUse the largest hose that fits. Keep runs short and tidy.Small penetrator to open, then flusherGrease and soft debris
3 to 4 inStandard jetter hose. Maintain steady pull-back motion.Penetrator to open, then flusher or rotaryGrease, sand, sludge
6 in and upStep up hose ID to lower friction loss over distance.High-flow flusher or rotary headSand, ice, heavy buildup

How jetter hose pulsation protects equipment and improves performance

Jetter hose pulsation and controlled vibration protect your hose and help you reach farther. Pulsation breaks the static grip between the hose and pipe wall so the hose slides around tight bends and through rough spots. It also reduces scraping and heat buildup that can shorten hose life.

When the industry first used high-pressure water cleaners, many crews tried pressure washer conversions with smooth hose and a backward-facing nozzle. Those setups often seized in the pipe because they lacked true pulsation. A stuck hose can turn into a very bad day. Dedicated waterjetting equipment is engineered to pulse and advance safely.

How to winterize waterjetting equipment and prevent pump damage

Freezing is the number one way to kill a pump. If you live where temperatures drop, it is hard to keep a pump from freezing on a frigid day. The damage can happen before, during, and after the job, and it can affect your hose as well as your pump.

If your unit has an antifreeze tank, make a habit of using it whenever the temperature is close to freezing. Keep water moving through the system in cold weather. After the job, purge water from the hose and pump, and store reels and the unit in a heated space when possible. Replace any hose that shows bulges or soft spots.

Cold-weather quick list

  • Circulate antifreeze before transport and after the job if equipped
  • Avoid long idle periods in freezing temps
  • Purge hose, gun and pump at day’s end
  • Store reels and the unit indoors when possible

Talk to the Drain Brains

Need expert advice on water jetting equipment, hose selection, or nozzles for your most common line sizes? Contact the Drain Brains at General Pipe Cleaners at 800-245-6200 or connect with our team here for recommendations.

View all our available water jetters here. Lastly, you can find a retailer or distributor near you via our Where to Buy page.


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