Septic Medic Bacterial Counts Beat the Competition
A. Septic Medic has a higher bacterial count.
Aerobic Bacteria/gram |
Anaerobic Bacteria/gram |
|
ROEBIC® K-37 Septic Tank | 450,000,000 (450 million) | 2,400,000 (2.4 million) |
RID-X® Septic System Treatment | 2,800,000 (2.8 million) | 1,400,000 (1.4 million) |
FLUSH® Septic System Treatment | 10,000,000 (10 million) | 2,100,000 (2.1 million) |
Septic Medic | 1,300,000,000 (3 Billion!) | 25,000,000 (25 Million!) |
Septic Medic is over 10 Times more concentrated than any competing product! |
(Data from independent laboratory test, using Standard Aerobic, Facultative, and Anaerobic plate counts)
B. Only Septic Medic is proven to eliminate sulfide odors.
C. Septic Medic laboratory study proves that Septic Medic improves discharge from septic tank in solids, BOD, and fats / grease. Septic Medic is beneficial for the environment! (See attached lab study for liquid Septic Medic).
Septic Medic Cleans the Lines
A). Pipes and lines leading to the tank, the distribution box or the leech field are clogged.
B). The leach field and/or septic tank have standing water on the surface of the ground above them.
C). Odors of raw sewage or decomposition are prevalent around the septic tank or the leech field.
D). The entire system backs up whenever a toilet is flushed, the clothes washer is
operated, or the dishwasher and sink are emptied .
Septic Medic Takes care of Cooking Grease
A). Cooking grease and fat have accumulated on the walls of the pipes and lines forming a gummy layer that will entrap solid particles causing a block in the line. Organic solids spilling over from the septic tank into the distribution box and the lines leading to the leech field have coated the distribution box and the lines from it with anaerobic mud that acts in a fashion similar to grease and fat.
Septic Medic Cleans the Leach Field
B). The pores in the absorption field have filled with organic solids, grease, fat and anaerobic bacteria, so water is no longer absorbed into the ground. The lines leading from the septic tank, as well as the tank itself, are filled with solids and/or grease and fat so entering wastewater has nowhere to go but to the surface of the ground.
C). Excessive amounts of wastewater are present and decomposing anaerobically in all sections of the septic system . Water is surfacing and bringing odor with it. The mixture of microorganisms needed to provide adequate treatment is no longer present in the tank or on the tiles and stones of the leech field .
D). A combination of all of the above is probably taking place. It is possible that a physical block in the line leading to the septic tank itself has occurred, but that is unlikely to be a problem of accumulation, rather the presence of a root or stone, or a broken pipe that has collapsed.
Conditions a, b and c will be corrected by pouring Drain Free directly into the toilet and flushing, allowing the bacteria to enter the system early and easily . Add one ( 1 ) gallon of Drain Free initially and one pint of Drain Free per week thereafter. Sluggish systems that are almost completely non-functional may be treated by adding one ( 1 ) gallons of Drain Free directly to the septic tank or to the distribution box and lines leading to the leech field. Follow that treatment with a pint of Drain Free per week thereafter, flushed down the toilet or a convenient sink drain. Always flush drain after adding Drain Free with cold or cool water. Drain Free will not dissolve roots, clay, silt, stones or plastic material. Therefore if a block in the line is determined to be caused by this kind of material it will be necessary to have the line opened mechanically prior to treatment with Drain Free. After removing the physical block treat as above.
Expected Results:
A). Pipes and lines will open and run freely. Grease and fat accumulation will be removed.
B). Puddling over tank and leach field will cease. The system will flow normally.
C). Odors of raw sewage and the anaerobic decomposition of waste around the tank, the lines, the distribution box and the leech field will disappear.
D). The entire system will flow normally and allow utilization of household equipment without back-ups.
Note:
If the septic tank has been in operation for longer than two years since it was installed or last cleaned, have the tank pumped prior to the addition of Drain Free. This will preclude overloading the leech bed with organic material solubilized from the tank during the treatment with Drain Free .
A septic tank used in conjunction with a water softener may experience problems with the leech field due to inorganic salt buildup in the pores of the leech field. This buildup is the result of the regeneration of the softener with brine. During the regeneration process, the metal ions of calcium, magnesium, iron and other constituents of the local water are washed off of the softener and flow into the septic system. If they are not contained by the septic tank these metals will precipitate as their phosphates, hydroxides or sulfides and block the leech bed. The use of Drain Free will have little impact on leach beds whose pores are filled with inorganic salts.
LLMO G1 can be used if you have access directly to septic tank. LLMO G1 is not designed to be put in the house through the commode.