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Water Jetters

Slice through grease, sludge, sand, and ice with water jetters

General’s water jetters are ideal for clearing soft stoppages and ice from clogged drain lines and sewer lines. They use a stream of high-pressure water that hits the stoppage and flushes it away. The thrust of the nozzle drives the hose down the line and gives you wall to wall cleaning action. You’ll find plenty of uses for General’s sewer jetters – in restaurants, hotels, hospitals, shopping malls, factories, schools, apartment complexes and septic systems everywhere.

Electric Water Jetters

Mini-Jet – Mini Price

  • Compact, lightweight unit weighs just 23 lbs.
  • Clears grease, sand and ice from 1-1/2″ – 3″ drain lines.
  • Generates 1500 psi at 1.4 gpm, pulls only 13 amps.
  • Rugged metal diamond plate case handles abuse in the field.

Compact, Portable, Powerful

  • Big cleaning power in a small package – clears 1-1/2” to 4” drain lines. 
  • Removable 150 ft. hose reel reduces height to 14-1/2″.
  • 1500 psi, 1.7 gpm triplex pump with Vibra-pulse® pulls only 13 amps.
  • Slide-out handle and 8” wheels for easy transport.

Gas Jetters

Big Gas Jet at a Bargain Price

  • Economical gas jetter is great for maintenance work.
  • 3000 psi, 4 gpm pump with Vibra-pulse®.
  • 389 cc (13 hp) engine with low oil shut off.
  • 200 ft. capacity hose reel with reel brake.
  • Rides on two flat-free foam core tires and heavy duty frame.

Solid Performance in the Toughest Conditions

  • High performance jetter clears 3 to 10″ drain lines, up to 300 ft. long.
  • Heavy-duty 3000 psi, 4 gpm pump with Vibra-pulse®
  • 389 cc (13 hp) engine with low oil shut off and electric start.
  • 2 to 1 Gear reducer extends pump life.
  • 300 ft. capacity removable hose reel with reel brake.
  • Rides on four flat-free foam core tires and heavy-duty easily maneuverable frame.

The Most Flow You Can Get Without a Holding Tank

  • For large lines and long runs, 8″ drain lines up to 600 ft. long.
  • Heavy-duty 3000 psi, 5.5 gpm pump with Vibra-pulse®
  • 480 cc (16 hp) engine with low oil shut off and electric start.
  • 2 to 1 Gear reducer extends pump life.
  • 300 ft. capacity hose reel with reel brake.
  • Rides on four flat-free foam core tires and heavy-duty easily maneuverable frame.

Get High Water Flow Without a Trailer

  • For large lines and long runs, 8″ drain lines up to 600 ft. long.
  • Heavy-duty 3000 psi, 8 gpm pump with Vibra-Pulse®.
  • 614 cc (20 hp) engine with low oil shut off and electric start.
  • 2 to 1 Gear reducer extends pump life.
  • 300 ft. capacity removable hose reel with reel brake.
  • Rides on four flat-free foam core tires and heavy-duty easily maneuverable frame.

Trailer Jetters

Big Jet Cleaning Power a Compact Package

  • Powerful jet ideal for clearing large drain lines with high water flow.
  • 200 gallon holding tank to handle remote jobs far from a water source.
  • Powerful 690 cc (24 hp) engine with low oil shutoff and electric start.
  • Heavy-duty 2500 psi, 12 gpm triplex pump with Vibra-Pulse®.
  • 400 ft. Jet hose reel with variable speed electric rewind.
  • Anti-freeze system protects unit from freeze damage.

Water Jetter Accessories

Accessories for Water Jet Drain Cleaners

  • General offers a variety of accessories for your sewer jetter system. 
  • Portable Cart-Reel™ lets you use gas water jetters indoors where exhaust fumes can be dangerous. 
  • Compact Handy-Reel™ can be easily carried to the roof to clear vents and stacks, while your sewer jetter remains on the ground. 
  • Optional Foot Pedal gives you added versatility and safer water-jet control. 

Tough, Durable Jetter Hose 

  • Durable high-pressure jetting hose comes in a variety of lengths and diameters for use with General’s sewer jetter systems. 
  • Available in 1/8”, 1/4″, 3/8”, and 1/2″ diameters and a variety of lengths. 
  • Optional high performance stainless steel braid jetter hose with and Teflon® core offers better cleaning power.

The Right Jetting Nozzle for the Job

  • Whether you’re up against grease, sand, or ice, there’s a General nozzle that will cut through it. 
  • Jetter nozzles are designed for maximum penetrating power, some are designed to pressure wash the pipe walls, and some are designed to go around sharp bends. 
  • Rotary Nozzles flush the lines clean leaving the drain lines crystal clear.
  • Chain Saw Nozzles spin at up to 10,000 RPM to rip through roots and other difficult stoppages. 
  • High Performance Nozzles for the Typhoon trailer jetter incorporate patented fluid mechanics that significantly increases the thrust, pulling power, and cleaning power.

The Complete Guide to Water Jetters for Drain and Sewer Cleaning

Water jetters, also called hydro jetters or sewer jetters, are professional drain cleaning machines that use a high-pressure stream of water to break up and flush out soft stoppages, grease buildup, sediment, sludge, sand, and ice from drain lines and sewer pipes. Unlike cable drain cleaners that punch through clogs, water jetters scour the inside of the pipe wall to wall, clearing the line and helping prevent the same blockage from forming again.

For plumbers, drain cleaning contractors, facility managers, and municipal crews, owning the right water jetter often means turning recurring service calls into long-term clean lines, and turning soft stoppages from an hourly battle into a routine maintenance task.

How a Water Jetter Cleans Drain Lines

A water jetter pumps water through a high-pressure hose to a specialized nozzle. The nozzle has a forward-facing orifice that breaks up the stoppage and several rear-facing jets that propel the hose down the line while scouring the pipe walls. The result is a fully cleaned pipe rather than a hole punched through a clog. Many General water jetters also feature Vibra-pulse, a pulsing action that reduces friction so the hose travels farther through long runs and tight bends.

When to Choose a Water Jetter Over a Cable Drain Machine

Cable machines are excellent for hard stoppages like roots and certain types of debris, but they tend to drill through a clog rather than remove the underlying material. A water jetter is the better tool when you are dealing with:

  • Grease, fats, oils, and food waste in restaurant and commercial kitchen lines
  • Sludge, sand, sediment, and scale in older sewer lines
  • Ice in frozen drain lines and downspouts
  • Mud and silt in catch basins, area drains, and parking lot drains
  • Soft buildup in vent stacks and roof drains
  • Recurring stoppages where the goal is full pipe restoration, not just opening a path

For tree root intrusion, a chain saw or root cutting nozzle can rip through roots at speeds up to 10,000 RPM, and on tougher root jobs many contractors will pair a cable machine with a water jetter for a complete cleaning.

Choosing the Right Water Jetter: PSI, GPM, and Line Size

Two specifications drive water jetter performance: pressure, measured in PSI (pounds per square inch), and flow, measured in GPM (gallons per minute). PSI breaks up the stoppage. GPM flushes the debris out of the line. Larger lines and longer runs need more of both. A simple field guide:

  • 1-1/2″ to 3″ drain lines: electric jetter, around 1500 PSI at 1.4 to 1.7 GPM (e.g., JM-1000 X Mini-Jet or JM-1450)
  • 3″ to 6″ drain lines: gas jetter, around 3000 PSI at 4 GPM (e.g., JM-2900 or JM-3000)
  • 6″ to 8″ lines and long runs: gas jetter at 3000 PSI, 5.5 to 8 GPM (e.g., JM-3055 or JM-3080)
  • Large municipal and commercial lines without a nearby water source: trailer jetter at 2500 PSI, 12 GPM with a 200 gallon holding tank (e.g., JM-2512 Typhoon)

Where Professionals Use Water Jetters

General sewer jetters are at work every day in restaurants and commercial kitchens, hotels and resorts, hospitals and medical centers, schools and universities, shopping centers and malls, apartment complexes and multifamily housing, manufacturing plants, food processing facilities, municipal sewer departments, septic service companies, RV parks, marinas, and property management companies. Anywhere a building has drain lines, a water jetter has a job to do.

Built for the Field

Every General water jetter is engineered for daily contractor use, with rugged frames, flat-free tires, removable hose reels, electric start gas engines on larger models, and accessories like the Cart-Reel for indoor work and the Handy-Reel for rooftop vent cleaning. Backed by U.S. based support from the Drain Brains, General water jetters are tools built to earn their keep on the truck.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a water jetter and how does it work?

A water jetter is a drain cleaning machine that uses a high-pressure stream of water, typically between 1500 and 3000 PSI, to break up and flush stoppages out of drain and sewer lines. Water travels through a hose to a specialized nozzle with forward and rear-facing orifices. The forward jet cuts the clog, the rear jets propel the hose down the line, and together they scour the pipe walls clean instead of just punching a hole through the blockage.

What is the difference between an electric and a gas water jetter?

Electric water jetters are compact, lightweight, and safe to operate indoors because they produce no exhaust. They typically generate 1500 PSI at 1.4 to 1.7 GPM and are ideal for sink lines, lavatory lines, and small drains from 1-1/2″ to 4″. Gas water jetters deliver much more pressure and flow, usually 3000 PSI at 4 to 8 GPM, and are built for larger lines from 3″ to 10″. Gas units must be run outdoors or properly vented because of engine exhaust.

When should I use a water jetter instead of a cable drain cleaner?

Use a water jetter for soft stoppages: grease, sludge, sand, silt, scale, ice, and food waste. Use a cable machine for hard stoppages, particularly heavy root intrusion. Many drain cleaning professionals carry both. They first run a cable to open the line, then follow with a jetter to scour the pipe wall to wall. The combination delivers a fully cleaned pipe rather than just an open path through the clog.

What size drain lines can a water jetter clean?

General water jetters cover the full range of residential and commercial line sizes. Compact electric units clean 1-1/2″ to 4″ lines. Mid-size gas jetters handle 3″ to 6″ lines up to several hundred feet long. Larger gas and trailer jetters clean 6″ to 10″ lines up to 600 feet long, which covers most municipal, industrial, and large commercial sewer work.

How much PSI and GPM do I really need?

PSI cuts the clog, GPM moves the debris out of the line. As a general rule, the bigger the pipe and the longer the run, the more flow you need. A residential kitchen sink line is well served by 1500 PSI at 1.4 GPM. A long 8″ municipal sewer line needs 3000 PSI at 5.5 GPM or more. Underspeccing GPM is one of the most common mistakes contractors make when purchasing their first water jetter.

Can a water jetter remove tree roots?

Yes, with the right nozzle. Chain saw nozzles spin at up to 10,000 RPM and shred roots inside the pipe, while penetrator and root cutting nozzles bore through dense root masses. For severe root intrusion, many professionals make a first pass with a cable machine fitted with a root cutter, then finish with a jetter to flush the debris and restore full pipe diameter.

What is Vibra-pulse and why does it matter?

Vibra-pulse is General’s pulsing technology that adds a rapid pulsation to the water flow. The pulse reduces friction between the hose and the inside of the pipe, which lets the hose travel farther down the line and around tight bends. On long runs and older, rougher pipes, Vibra-pulse often makes the difference between reaching the stoppage and getting stuck halfway there.

Can I use a gas water jetter indoors?

Not directly. Gas engines produce carbon monoxide and must be operated outdoors or in a fully vented space. To run a gas jetter for indoor work, use the Portable Cart-Reel. The engine and pump stay outside while the reel and hose come inside through a door or window, giving you full gas jetter cleaning power without the exhaust hazard.

Do I need a water source on site to use a jetter?

Most electric and gas jetters connect to a standard garden hose bib or to a tank with a transfer pump. When there is no water source available on site, a trailer jetter like the JM-2512 Typhoon carries its own 200 gallon holding tank, so you can run long jobs at remote locations, parking lots, undeveloped properties, and rural service calls.

How do I choose the right water jetter for my business?

Start with the lines you clean most often. If you mostly work on residential and small commercial sink and lavatory drains, an electric jetter pays for itself quickly. If you run larger commercial sewer and main line work, a gas jetter in the 3 to 8 GPM range will cover most jobs. If you handle municipal, industrial, or remote work without ready water access, a trailer jetter is the right tool. Not sure? Use the Pro Tool Selection Guide or chat with a Drain Brain.