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Hydro jetting

Short definition

Hydro jetting uses a high-pressure water-jet head pulled through a drain or sewer line to cut grease, scale, and small roots, then flush debris back to a cleanout. Residential machines run 1,500–4,000 psi; commercial setups go to 4,000–7,000+ psi. It’s a different tool from a mechanical auger (snake) — one cuts and flushes; the other catches and pulls.

What it is

A hydro jet uses water pressure to do the cutting. The head has forward and rear jets: forward jets cut soft material like grease and root mats; rear jets propel the head and flush debris back toward the cleanout. The water carries everything out as the head retreats.

What hydro jetting does well:

  • Clears grease blockages in kitchen lines (the residential default).
  • Cuts scale and sediment out of older cast-iron drains.
  • Cuts soft root mats and finishes after a mechanical pre-pass on harder roots.
  • Pre-cleans before CIPP lining — required so the liner adheres properly.

What hydro jetting doesn’t do well:

  • Hard root masses need an auger or cutter blade pre-pass.
  • Collapsed pipe needs replacement, not jetting.
  • Soft Orangeburg or weakened clay tile can be damaged by high pressure — the operator has to match pressure to pipe condition.

Why it matters to a homeowner

When a quote includes “hydro jet the side sewer,” the typical residential cost is $300–$800 for a single-cleanout job and $500–$1,500 for full main-and-branches service. For chronic kitchen-line clogs that keep returning even after augering, hydro jetting is usually the right escalation: augers leave a hole through the grease, but the grease comes back in weeks. Jetting strips the grease off the pipe wall.

The other situation: if you’re getting CIPP lining done, jetting is a mandatory pre-step — the host pipe has to be clean for the liner to bond.

When you’ll encounter this term

  • Recurring kitchen-line clogs after multiple augerings: jetting clears the grease augers leave behind.
  • Quoted “hydro jet the side sewer” — usually $500–$1,000; expect an auger pre-pass for hard roots first.
  • Pre-CIPP cleaning is on the work order.
  • Quote line says “snake first, then hydro jet” — that’s the right order for a root-plus-grease clog.

Common variants / not the same as

  • Hydro jet vs. mechanical auger (snake). Jet uses water pressure to cut and flush. Auger uses a cable with a cutter blade to catch and pull. Auger is right for hard roots; jet is right for grease and finishing.
  • Hydro jet vs. hydro vac. Vac is for excavation (water plus vacuum to expose buried pipe). Jet is for cleaning the inside of a pipe.
  • Trailer-mounted vs. truck-mounted vs. portable. Capacity scales with the rig — 4 GPM portable up to 18+ GPM commercial truck.

Common failure modes / risks

  • High pressure damages weakened pipe (Orangeburg, soft clay, corroded CI from inside) — pressure must match pipe condition.
  • Without a cutter pre-pass, dense root mass clogs the jet head.
  • Operator inexperience — head retrieval after a hose break is costly.