Fast Drain

MSRP:

$59.95

Title

All Natural Drain Cleaner

Fast Drain is an Environmentally Friendly Enzyme/Bacteria Waste and Grease Digestant. Use this product to clean and keep free flowing all your indoor plumbing. Clean and Deodorize your pipes and drains from harmful molds, mildews, and bacteria that gain access to your Indoor Air through open drains. One container will last a residential customer for a year with monthly costs under Five Dollars. This is a must have product if you have indoor plumbing.

Enzyme / Bacteria Waste & Grease Digestant
* ECO Friendly
* BIO-DEGRADABLE
* NON-POISONOUS
* NON-TOXIC
* NON-CAUSTIC
* NON-CORROSIVE
* ENVIRONMENTALLY SAFE PROTECTION

Common Questions regarding Fast Drain:

Have an Issue with Slow Drains?


Before using Fast Drain


After using Fast Drain

Over time food particles, dish soap and grease can build up and slow down your drains. Drains are utilized thousands of times through a given year. Every use of the drain allows grease, soap scum and hair to accumulate. This daily accumulation remains on the inner walls of the pipes. The thicker the buildup the slower the drain will run. In the kitchen, garbage disposals compound the problem because food particles are now smaller and move easily attached tot he walls of the pipes with the congealed grease. In the bathroom, soaps, shaving cream and hair can cause your drains to slow down. In the laundry room, soap residue along with lint and laundry detergents can cause the slowdown of drains. Once the buildup starts it is very difficult to reverse. As these materials accumulate within the pipes the drainage will slow down and eventually a stoppage will occur. Enzymes and bacteria attack these organic materials and then decompose them by a natural enzymatic bacteria process. If your drains do not receive proper care they will become clogged. No one enjoys the foul odors, messy cleanup and hassles of clogged drains.

Biological Activity in these systems

The frequency of cleaning is an important factor in the continued operation of your septic system, drains, or grease trap. In addition, there needs to be biological activity. Colonizing bacterial organisms will set up a "bio-film" between the waste water and the organic solids. The "bio-film" is where most of the digestion takes place. First the enzymes break down the solids, thus allowing bacteria to fully utilize them as a food source (converting these organics to CO2 and water) Enzymes need to be present to break down the waste before the bacteria can perform their digestion. The enzymes we use are unique in that each one is functional and contributes to the bio-degradation process. The enzymes we use are highly specialized for this purpose, they are:

LIPASE- breaks down grease, oils, and fats
PECTINASE- breaks down pectin and gums
CELLULASE - breaks down papers and fibers
AMYLASE - breaks down starches
PROTEASE - breaks down proteins

They work their magic through natural process that have been around since the beginning of time. The bacteria we use are selected strains ideally suited to thrive in drain lines, septic tanks, and grease traps. This combination produces an effective waste eating machine.

Store Fast Drain in a cool, dry place. Do not use in conjunction with bleaches, anti-bacterial soaps, harsh detergents, disinfectants, or harsh drain cleaning chemicals.

How do I use Fast Drain?

DIRECTIONS:
Badly clogged or non-operating grease traps and drains should be cleaned before application.

Sluggish grease traps and drains: Troublesome grease traps and drains could benefit from an initial shock treatment. Add 1 canister into the grease trap as a shock treatment. For sluggish drains add 2 scoops into sluggish drain as a shock treatment. Best results are obtained at night when the grease trap or drains are not in use.

Grease trap daily maintenance: With grease trap working properly use 3 scoops per day Simply poor scoop contents down the drain running to the grease trap. Repeat daily.

Household drains monthly maintenance: With drains working properly pour 1 scoop down each drain. Best results are obtained at night when drains are not in use. Repeat monthly.

Sewage ponds, sewage systems, sewage holding tanks: Ask your cleaning professional for bulk quantities and application rates.

Authorized for use in federally inspected meat and poultry plants.

Notice: Neither the manufacturer nor the seller makes any warranty, expressed or implied, concerning the use of the product other than indicated on the label, Buyer assumes all risk of use of this material which is contrary to the label.

How do I maintain my Septic waste system?

The biodegradability process is effective at reducing the buildup in pipes, it helps to reduce solids in the septic tank and soil absorption area, plus reduces grease buildup in grease traps. Many harsh chemicals will kill off the biological activity within your systems. Kitchen cleaners, floor cleaners, dish soaps, laundry detergents, and hand soaps all do damage to the biological environment within drains, grease traps, and septic systems. Other materials can cause a kill off of biological activities including chlorine bleaches, anti-biotic drugs, and chemical drain openers. That is why it is recommended to replace these natural enzymes and bacteria on a regular basis to keep the biological activity strong within your system. Each conveniently packaged treatment contains enzymes and billions of bacteria which go to work immediately to restore the biological activity!

How does a Septic System work?

In the drain field the enzymes and bacteria continue to work helping to reduce glazing and improve soil absorption in the drain field. Septic systems are designed to work indefinitely if they are properly installed and maintained. It is critical to have your septic tank pumped out on a regular schedule and to maintain proper levels of enzyme and bacteria action within the septic tank and drain field.

What are Amylase Enzymes?

Amylase is an enzyme that breaks starch down into sugar. Amylase is present in human saliva, where it begins the chemical process of digestion. Foods that contain much starch but little sugar, such as rice and potato, taste slightly sweet as they are chewed because amylase turns some of their starch into sugar in the mouth. The pancreas also makes amylase (alpha amylase) to break down dietary starch into di- and trisaccharides which are converted by other enzymes to glucose to supply the body with energy. Plants and some bacteria also produce amylase. As diastase, amylase was the first enzyme to be discovered and isolated (by Anselme Payen in 1833). Specific amylase proteins are designated by different Greek letters. All amylases are glycoside hydrolases and act on α-1,4-glycosidic bonds.

Uses

What are Cellulase Enzymes?

Cellulase refers to a class of enzymes produced chiefly by fungi, bacteria, and protozoans that catalyze the cellulolysis (or hydrolysis) of cellulose. However, there are also cellulases produced by other types of organisms such as plants and animals. Several different kinds of cellulases are known, which differ structurally and mechanistically. The EC number for this group of enzymes is EC 3.2.1.

Reaction: Hydrolysis of 1,4-beta-D-glycosidic linkages in cellulose, lichenin and cereal beta-D-glucans.

What are Lipase Enzymes?

A lipase is a water-soluble enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of ester bonds in water–insoluble, lipid substrates. Lipases thus comprise a subclass of the esterases.

Lipases perform essential roles in the digestion, transport and processing of dietary lipids (e.g. triglycerides, fats, oils) in most- if not all- living organisms. Genes encoding lipases are even present in certain viruses.

Function

Most lipases act at a specific position on the glycerol backbone of lipid substrate (A1, A2 or A3).

In the example of human pancreatic lipase (HPL), which is the main enzyme responsible for breaking down fats in the human digestive system, a lipase acts to convert triglyceride substrates found in oils from food to monoglycerides and free fatty acids.

Myriad of other lipase activities exist in nature, especially when the phospholipases and sphingomyelinases are considered.

Structure

What are Pectinase Enzymes?

Pectinase is a general term for enzymes that break down pectin, a polysaccharide substrate that is found in the cell walls of plants. One of the most studied and widely used commercial pectinases is polygalacturonase. It is useful because pectin is the jelly-like matrix which helps cement plant cells together and in which other cell wall components, such as cellulose fibrils, are embedded. Therefore pectinase enzymes are commonly used in processes involving the degradation of plant materials, such as speeding up the extraction of fruit juice from fruit, including apples and sapota. Pectinases have also been used in wine production since the 1960s.

What are Protease Enzymes?

A protease is any enzyme that conducts proteolysis, that is, begins protein catabolism by hydrolysis of the peptide bonds that link amino acids together in the polypeptide chain.

Occurrence

Proteases occur naturally in all organisms. These enzymes are involved in a multitude of physiological reactions from simple digestion of food proteins to highly-regulated cascades (e.g., the blood-clotting cascade, the complement system, apoptosis pathways, and the invertebrate prophenoloxidase-activating cascade). Peptidases can either break specific peptide bonds (limited proteolysis), depending on the amino acid sequence of a protein, or break down a complete peptide to amino acids (unlimited proteolysis). The activity can be a destructive change, abolishing a protein's function or digesting it to its principal components; it can be an activation of a function, or it can be a signal in a signaling pathway.

What is a Grease Trap?

Grease and its disposal are one of the biggest problems facing most restaurant and food service facilities today. Hot water dissolves kitchen grease and deposits it in the water. This material then attaches itself to the interior surface of the pipes. If you don't clean out the grease and food buildup it will cause foul odors, slow drainage and eventual stoppage. Grease traps are designed to intercept and hold grease before it gets to the municipal sewer line or your septic tank system. If designed properly, grease traps should be of adequate size to handle the grease flow.

Clean up your grease trap today the ECO friendly way! By purchasing Fast Drain.

What is a Septic System?

A septic system is an on-site sewage treatment and disposal system buried underground. It is composed of a septic tank and a soil absorption area. The modern septic tank is a water-tight box usually made of reinforced pre-cast concrete or reinforced fiberglass, through which no natural bacteria are able to enter. This structure is where organic solids are decomposed by a natural enzymatic bacteria process. The treated effluent flows out into the drain field where it percolates the soil.