A blocked drain is rarely random. Tropical humidity, soft-water minerals, oil from kitchen waste, and the slow accumulation of paper or hair create the conditions that turn a clear pipe into a tight one. Once the diameter narrows, every additional cycle deposits more material — until the drain simply refuses to cooperate during the breakfast rush.
The methods we use, in order
- Manual augering for small kitchen and bathroom traps, where a 6 mm rotary cable removes hair, paper, and minor scale build-up
- Hydrojetting at 1,500–4,000 psi for stubborn organic and grease deposits inside 50–150 mm lines
- CCTV camera inspection using a self-levelling head with on-screen footage you can keep
- Pipe relining recommendations when the inspection reveals collapsed PVC or compromised sections
- Trench excavation for outdoor stormwater lines that have been displaced by tree roots or settled subsoil
Where we typically work
- Kitchen sinks, dishwashers, and floor traps
- Bathroom basins, bathtubs, and shower drains
- Outdoor courtyard and balcony drains
- Common-area stormwater lines for condo strata
- Café and restaurant grease lines (service contracts available)
- Sump pumps and basement discharge lines
“They turned up with a camera, found a hairline crack in a 90° elbow that two other companies had missed, and replaced just that fitting. Two years on, the drain is still clear.” — Yong Wei, condo owner, Bangsar
About the recommendation report
For every CCTV inspection we issue a short PDF: an annotated still frame at each defect, a sketch of the pipe run, and three options ranked by cost, disruption, and longevity. You can pass that report to your strata council, your insurer, or simply file it next to the title deed.