Treating kitchen drain grease deposits biologically — customer reference
This customer reference video shows how to treat grease deposits in the kitchen drain biologically — told from the perspective of a household where the drain has become an issue.
The recording is aimed at households and anyone dealing with a slow drain and grease deposits in the kitchen who wants a hands-on impression.
What the reference video shows
The video accompanies a kitchen drain where grease has deposited and shows how a biological treatment is applied in the household. It shows the handling from the user’s point of view.
The contribution is a customer reference and reflects a personal, practical impression. It is intended as a clear illustration, not as a standardised measurement record.
What the video is about
Three points for context:
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1
Grease deposits in the kitchen drain can be treated biologically — complementing the usual handling of the drain.
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2
The biological treatment is intended as support and does not replace basic maintenance of the pipe network.
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3
The video shows handling from a household’s point of view and is aimed at private users.
Why grease in the kitchen drain matters
In the kitchen, grease enters the drain via dishwater and food residues. There it can deposit on pipe walls, affect flow and, over time, cause a slow drain and odour.
A biological treatment starts right there: lipolytic microorganisms assist the breakdown of grease in the drain area. The reference video illustrates what this approach looks like in the household — as support in dealing with grease deposits, not as a replacement for basic maintenance.
Treat grease deposits in the kitchen drain biologically — start where the grease actually occurs.