Own a home built in the 60s and have a well and septic system. One of my bathrooms has a very slow draining commode. Have had a roto-rooter type service at home before to clean out the commode line to septic tank.....have a problem in line.
Our five kids are long gone, wife and I live alone and seldom use the bathroom with line problem. However, this week a daughter and her family will visit, so having this commode available to use caused me to call roto-rooter service again since commode bowl is again soooooo slow to drain.
A young Roto-rooter guy showed up and I explained history of the commode's problem and flushed the commode to show him how water rose in bowl and very slowy drained. He asked me if I had any dish washing liquid soap, which I did. Handed him the bottle of Dawn dish soap and he proceeded to squirt a lite ring of soap in water of commode bowl. Five or so seconds later he flushed the commode. Water drained extremely fast from bowl. I was kinda stunned....asking the young roto rooter guy....OK, explain the physics of just what I saw?
Guy said, "I have no idea.....my grandfather (a retired plumber) had casually mentioned using dish washing soap to me a couple of weeks ago as a possible way to determine if an old commode needed to be replaced." (Replaced because drain tube in commode has a calcium/etc. build up causing problem) "This is only the 2nd time I've tried the soap trick in a commode that drained very slowly." "Had same results in my first try with dish soap". Guy will wait for tank of commode to fill and then flushed again.....again commode drained very slowly. Tank refilled, he squirted some Dawn into toliet bowel and flushed commode....again bowl drained very fast.
I declined his offer to replace the commode with a new one for $350, saying I've been doing repairs and etc. in my home(s) for around 40 years and replacing a commode is something I can do myself.
But, I'm still trying to figure out the dish soap thing in a commode.