The Lifetime of a Garbage Disposal
May. 11th, 2010 11:52 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
According to the websites that I visited yesterday, the average lifetime of a garbage disposal is 10 to 12 years. Since our house is going on 14 years old, this would explain why our builder-installed disposal is stubbornly refusing to grind potato skins fine enough to go through the pipe without clogging it up. Sunday night was the second time that this happened and it took both
daisy_knotwise and I (again!) to get it unclogged after the application of a whole bunch of drain cleaner. (It's a dual sink, so Gretchen held one plunger in place as a stopper while I plunged the open side with great vigor.)
I took this as a hint. The original garbage disposal was a InSinkErator 1/3 hp Badger 1. Tonight, I purchased a InSinkErator 1 hp Excel model which I'm hoping will eat pretty much anything we want to throw at it. Supposedly, a replacement garbage disposal is easily installed by one person. However, it apparently is very useful to have a second person handy to help hold the thing up while doing the installation. (The recommended alternative appears to be building a stack of books to hold it up. Thank you, but no. I like my books.) I considered having it professionally installed if it didn't cost too much, but I carefully checked with
samwinolj to see if he were available to help in case of obscenely high installation costs.
$150 was well into the obscene range, so I've officially asked Sam for the favor.
We'll see if $150 still seems obscene when we finish. :)
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I took this as a hint. The original garbage disposal was a InSinkErator 1/3 hp Badger 1. Tonight, I purchased a InSinkErator 1 hp Excel model which I'm hoping will eat pretty much anything we want to throw at it. Supposedly, a replacement garbage disposal is easily installed by one person. However, it apparently is very useful to have a second person handy to help hold the thing up while doing the installation. (The recommended alternative appears to be building a stack of books to hold it up. Thank you, but no. I like my books.) I considered having it professionally installed if it didn't cost too much, but I carefully checked with
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
$150 was well into the obscene range, so I've officially asked Sam for the favor.
We'll see if $150 still seems obscene when we finish. :)
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Date: 2010-05-12 12:59 pm (UTC)I dunno, I think I remember installing one once for someone. I don't think we've ever been in a place that had one, though maybe we did in the old apartment or something. I'm just thinking if you have to hold it up from underneath AND work down there, it'd be pretty cramped.
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Date: 2010-05-12 01:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-05-12 02:02 pm (UTC)The ideal disposal mounting technician is very small, can lift a 50lb weight one handed at arms length, and maneuver it precisely. I've yet to meet this person.
Bill also bought the largest, most powerful, and therefor probably heaviest unit.
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Date: 2010-05-12 02:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-05-12 02:11 pm (UTC)I just don't see that a second person can be used at all.
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Date: 2010-05-12 02:07 pm (UTC)The person on the floor is moving the unit around, bumping the first persons legs, and hoping like H that the stick doesn't dislodge and drop the unit on their nose.
The board doesn't help much, the person on the bottom still has to lift the unit the last inch. One inch, or a foot, they're still lifting it.