T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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55.1 | Water Pressure - Building Code Requirements - Nashua? | SAGE::AUSTIN | Tom Austin @MK02. OIS Marketing | Sun Jan 18 1987 11:16 | 2 |
| In southern NH (Nashua), what are the code requirements for water
pressure in new construction?
|
55.2 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Mon Jan 19 1987 09:14 | 16 |
| To be strictly correct, you'll also have to take into account:
Length of the run
Number of bends (elbows)
Constrictions in the faucet and other shutoff valves that may
be in the line
Vertical rise
In other words, I'm not sure any number you'd get would really tell
you much. I also don't know what the formula would be, so I guess
I'm no help at all!
I do have one suggestion - check the screen (if there is one) on the
outlet of the faucet. The aerator gizzie should just unscrew, and
you'll be able to get at the screen and the little holes in the
aerator. They sometimes plug up with random junk and make it appear
as though your water pressure has gone to hell. Happened to me
in my bathroom.
|
55.3 | Fluid dynamics 101 | KELVIN::RPALMER | Handyman in Training | Mon Jan 19 1987 09:44 | 22 |
|
Well Tom, you can make a rough estimate on the pressure from
the water flow. You will have to make a *Big* assumption that the
height of the water tank is on the same level as the outlet. The
real solution is to use the complete Bernoulli Equation which would
make the problem impossible to solve.
Start by converting Z (gals of water/min)*(.133 ft3/gal)=(ft3/min)
(ft3/min)/(ft2 area of pipe)= ft/min fluid flow= 60*(ft/sec)flow
Now, Delta P = .5(density of water)(velocity)**2/(Gm)
Substituting:
density of water= 7.5 lbs/ft3
velocity = ft/sec
Gm = 32.2 ft/sec2
gives you answer with units of (lbs/ft2).
I think it will work, at least the units work out.
Good luck trying to explain it to the builder!
|
55.4 | plumbing | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Mon Jan 19 1987 10:12 | 7 |
| > I do have one suggestion - check the screen (if there is one) on the
> outlet of the faucet.
This is especially true with new construction. There's lot of metal
shavings or bits of solder in there when the plumbing is first done.
Check the pressure with the screens removed.
|
55.5 | | SEINE::CJOHNSON | My heart belongs to Daddy! | Mon Jan 19 1987 12:27 | 8 |
| RE: .3
Does 7.5 lbs/ft3 translate to 7.5 lbs per cubic foot of water?
I think you may have this confused with 7.5 gal per cubic foot
of water. Yes?
Charlie
|
55.6 | Be careful what you measure. | LEDS::MOORE | Tom Moore SHR1/B10 237-3690 | Tue Jan 20 1987 01:11 | 14 |
| What you are trying to measure has a lot of value to you but may not be what
the code is enforcing. When the faucet is open the outlet is at atmospheric
presure. When the valve is off the presure goes up. The only presure that
makes any sense is the static presure. If you try to measure the presure drop
through a length of pipe by the flow you have to think about the pipe it
connects to. You could measure the static presure by getting some clear
hose and close it off at one end. Get a fixed volume of air in your hose and
then apply your presure to it. The ratio of your old and new volumes is equal
to the ratio of your static presure to atmospheric presure which is somewhere
around 15 psi. Measuring gallons per minute is what you care about but that is
effected by the static water presure and the constrictions in the water path
all the way back.
Good luck
|
55.11 | City water with free ground water bonus | SCOTCH::GLICK | Blessed by the Holy Puffins of Merrimack | Mon Feb 09 1987 09:38 | 18 |
| Could have sworn I saw this mentioned already but reading the notes with
the basement keyword came up empty. Pointer or advice appreciated.
I have this basement (so the story begins) that is very water tight with a
single exception, where the connection to city water comes into the house.
There's a 4" hole around a 1/?" pipe. We live on a slope with good
drainage so it takes a LOT of wet before any water comes into the basement
(rolly polly bugs come in anytime. . .) but we got water towards the end of
NHs summer monsoon season this year, and with all the snow I expect this
spring will be more of a thin brown gruel season than mud season.
So. How do I seal this hole. Will hydraulic(?) cement work? Or will it
expand to the point of crushing the water pipe? Perhaps just install a
shop vac with the hose taped into place and leave it running :-)
- Byron
|
55.12 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Mon Feb 09 1987 12:38 | 9 |
| Hydraulic cement would be the first thing to try, I'd say. Clean
out as much crud on the sides of the hole as you can first, of
course, so it's clean. I can't imagine it would crush the pipe,
the ends of the hole aren't close off. Besides, it doesn't expand
that much. Put in as much cement as you can, as deeply into the
hole as you can get it, and hope it works. If it doesn't, next
thing would be to dig down on the outside of the founation and
repeat the operation from that side.
|
55.13 | WATER PRESSURE PROBLEMS | VAXINE::GUERRA | | Thu Feb 19 1987 12:24 | 12 |
| We have been experiencing some water pressure problems at home.
When the washer, which is in the cellar, is filling, there is no
water on the first floor. The other day I ran downstairs just in
time to hear the pump kick in. The pressure gage was reading 30
psi and quickly rising to 40 psi, where I think it is supposed to
be. Lately, it's been so low that it takes the washer a lot more
time to fill up. Pressure seems ok when the washer isn't using water.
Could it be the temperature playing games with the pipes or
the pump controls? With the weather like it's been the past few
weeks, I swear it's darn close to freezing down there. The last
thing I want to do is call the $$plumber$$ to find out I could have
done something myself.
|
55.14 | Just a couple of thoughts | WORDS::DUKE | | Thu Feb 19 1987 12:31 | 9 |
| The slow washer fill could be the filter screens in the hoses are
plugged.
The lack of water pressure on first floor when the washer is filling,
seems a little strange when the washer is filling slowly. Almost
sounds like an obstruction in the line somewhere. Did someone
partially close a valve somewhere by any chance?
|
55.15 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Thu Feb 19 1987 12:32 | 5 |
| Is the air chamber in your pressure tank waterlogged, maybe? Try
turning on a faucet and watching the pressure gage. If the pressure
drops rapidly, pump comes on and builds up pressure rapidly and
shuts off, the pressure drops rapidly, etc. you probably need to
pump some air into the pressure tank.
|
55.16 | Thanks | VAXINE::GUERRA | | Thu Feb 19 1987 12:52 | 2 |
| Thanks for both your replies (.1 & .2). I will check on your
suggestions tonight.
|
55.17 | How about the gauge? | DRUID::CHACE | | Thu Feb 19 1987 13:31 | 8 |
| Don't forget to check the gauge. Those pump gauges fail all the
time and are very prone to sticking. If you pump shuts off at 40
it should not come on at 30. 20-40 is the normal setting for on
and off. While you could have a waterlogged tank, it does not affect
the actual pressure coming out, just how often the pump has to turn
on.
Kenny
|
55.18 | Checked it out | VAXINE::GUERRA | | Fri Feb 20 1987 11:26 | 11 |
| I think .2 is right. I tested it last night by opening a few faucets.
The pressure went down to 30, the pump started, pressure went up
to 40, pump stopped, pressure went down...
No valves have been shut off, though.
.4, is there a reason why the pump should start at 20 instead of
30? Does it need to be reset somehow?
Thanks again,
Sal
|
55.19 | 20-40 is a normal setting for on/off | DRUID::CHACE | | Fri Feb 20 1987 13:09 | 14 |
| The reason it should go from 20-40 is so that the pump doesn't
cycle so often. I have never seen or heard of a pump that cycles
30-40. That leads me to think that there is something wrong either
with your gauge, or the the pressure switch that turns the pump
on/off.
It does sound as if your tank is water-logged. This still won't
affect the way the pressure acts in the line. If the pressure never
goes below 30, then irregardless of how ofetn the pump cycles you
should have 30 psi (minimum) available. If that's the case then
you have some other problems with your lines. Of course there will
be a drop in pressure at one faucet when another is turned on, but
it shouldn't be to the extent you are experiencing.
Kenny
|
55.20 | | VAXINE::GUERRA | | Fri Feb 20 1987 13:41 | 13 |
| I think the gage is accurate. I checked the pressure in the tank
with a tire pressure what-do-you-call-it and the reading was the
same. I should check the switch to see what it is set at, if that
is at all possible. I will also try and pump some air in.
I am inclined to believe that I have some amount of ice in the pipes.
As I said before, it can get mighty cold down there. I guess we've
been lucky they haven't burst.
I'll post my findings.
Thanks,
Sal
|
55.21 | Problem Resolved | VAXINE::GUERRA | | Mon Feb 23 1987 12:28 | 9 |
| I flushed the tank this weekend to find out there was an enormous
amount of sediment settled in the bottom of the tank. Of course,
then I remembered that we have a filter which was only three months
old but with the amount of sediment coming out of the tank, it needed
replacing. They usually last over six months. I adjusted the switch
to 20-40. The hardest thing was figuring out which screw controlled
the high and which controlled the low. I am a beginner at this,
what do I know? Anyway, the problem is resolved. Thanks one more
time for your help.
|
55.22 | How do you adjust your pump to 20-40 psi | AKOV01::MCPHEE | | Tue Feb 24 1987 15:10 | 19 |
| re .8
I have a pump with two adjustments which are really two bolts.
One bolt is longer than the other. I keep twisting and testing the
nuts which adjust a spring loaded shutoff switch until the start and
stop pressures appear close enough to 20-40 psi. I have never been
able to figure out which shaft controls what. It appears that one bolt
controls the turn on pressure (20 psi) and the other bolt controls the
number of lbs. offset before the pump shuts off. Does anyone have
a pump with this type of adjustment? If so, is there some kind
of "scientific" approach to this adjustment process?
Thanks,
Tom
|
55.23 | | VAXINE::GUERRA | | Fri Feb 27 1987 16:57 | 7 |
| The switch on my pump is like yours. Both bolts have a spring under
them which is what increases or decreases the resistance of the
switch to the water pressure. The tighter the spring, the more pressure
it will resist. I will have to check on this (how soon I forget!)
but I think the small bolt controls the low (turn on) pressure
and the larger bolt controls the high (turn off). I will check it
out this weekend and let you know.
|
55.24 | | VAXINE::GUERRA | | Mon Mar 02 1987 12:35 | 10 |
| I checked the switch and I was right. The small bolt controls the
off pressure and the large bolt controls the on pressure. What I
do is open a few faucets to bring the pressure down. If I want to
adjust the off pressure, I turn the power off at the main box and
procede to adjust. Close the main valve to the house so pressure
will build up rapidly (remember the faucets are open elsewhere in
the house), turn the power on and watch where the pump turns off.
Then open the main valve, allow the pressure to decrease and
adjust again if needed. The same procedure can be used to adjust
the on pressure.
|
55.33 | Low water pressure problem - city water | EUCLID::PRINCE | | Fri Apr 10 1987 08:37 | 17 |
|
I own an older two family house with a terrible water pressure.
If the first floor is taking a shower, the second gets practically
nothing, and vice versa. The plumbing has been converted to copper,
but the main from the street is an old galvanized line. The water
department tells me it was put in 1934. Even though it seems clear
that this is the problem, is there any way to make sure before I
sink the $$$ for a new main line? Also, any ideas how much this
would cost? Anything I can do to reduce those costs?
Thanks in advance.
Steve
P.S. The city recently put in new lines in the street, and my
neighbors report excellent pressure.
|
55.34 | Join the club | KELVIN::RPALMER | Half a bubble off plumb | Fri Apr 10 1987 09:55 | 11 |
|
I've also got a 30's vintage galvnaized water main. The
interesting thing about galvanized lines is that they rust from
the inside out. The water gets brown and chunks break off and
clog the line lowering the pressure. I have to flush my water heater
every week. The only way I can think of to check is to flush your
water heater and check for rust. Does your water run brown?
My town replaces the water lines with a heavy gauge copper line
for about $10 per foot. I'm on the list to get mine done.
=Ralph=
|
55.35 | Check with the town | MENTOR::HOPEWELL | Mark Hopewell | Fri Apr 10 1987 10:41 | 9 |
| I had the galvanized pipe in the house when I fist moved in. The
main from the street was fairly new so I had good pressure coming
in. When I replaced the galvanized pipe my pressue incease
dramatically. The old pipe was almost fully clogged with rust. Check
with the town and see what they say. They should be able to give
you an estimate. Sooner or later the old pipe will either clog
completely or break.
Mark
|
55.36 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Mon Apr 13 1987 13:49 | 6 |
| Check to see if you have a pressure regulator on the water line.
It should be pretty close to your water meter (probably on the house
side of the meter). It'll probably look something like a truncated
cone with a screw coming out of the top of it, the whole business
maybe 4-5" high. These things sometimes jam, and reduce the pressure
more than they are set to.
|
55.37 | Now what? | CHEAPR::SCANLAND | I'd rather be driving a ... | Tue Apr 14 1987 13:25 | 11 |
| re: .3
> These things sometimes jam, and reduce the pressure
> more than they are set to.
How do you Check/adjust it? I have a pressure guage downstream of the
thing. Turn on the water or flush a toilet and the pressure drops by
half. To me this means that 1) insufficient pressure from the street.
or 2) regulator not regulating - or is it just a reducing valve?
Chuck
|
55.38 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Thu Apr 16 1987 10:37 | 5 |
| You adjust them by turning the screw on top, but I'm not sure how
much or which way. I think the usual thing to do is to replace
one when it starts giving problems. However, it might not be the
problem, of course....
|
55.39 | turn in for more | JUNIOR::NEWBERY | A 1 track mind takes no sidings | Thu Apr 16 1987 12:08 | 8 |
| I had one of those on my house in Rochester NY. If I remember
correctly you turn the screw in to increase presure. There was a
locking nut on mine so be sure to loosen it before the adjustment
is made and tighten it after. They are used to reduce presure in
the house to a usable level but in my case was a big pain with problems
like describe in previous notes. My "reducer" was located after
one of the outside faucets in above a ceiling in the basement. So
you may have to hunt for yours...
|
55.40 | Let's see what happens | CHEAPR::SCANLAND | I'd rather be driving a ... | Fri Apr 17 1987 12:46 | 9 |
| No, mine is easy to get to, also has a pressure guage right next to it.
When no water is running it sits at about 90 (psi?). Turn on the sink,
and it drops to 45. From my memories of fluid dynamics, this would be
approriate for a reducing valve. On the other hand, it would be nice if
indeed it was a true pressure regulator, which I think it is. I'll try
adjusting it and see if anything changes (like bursting a pipe 8-)
Chuck
|
55.41 | scalded in the shower again | ZEN::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Mon Jun 29 1987 00:43 | 15 |
| i *think* this note answered my question, but I want to
double-check...
My house has the old "flush-the-toilet-when-someone's-in-the-shower
and-scald-him" problem.
The water line comes into the house, past a turn-on, thru an inverted
cone thingamajigger with a single screw at the top, thru a water meter
(no pressure gauge here), thru another turnoff, and out into the house.
Do I just turn the screw on the thingamigger? which way? how much?
thanx/j
The house is 26yrs old
|
55.42 | Fill the toilet slower. | ULTRA::BUTCHART | | Mon Jun 29 1987 11:44 | 6 |
| 'Nother thing that works as a quick fix is to simply lower the rate
at which the toilet refills by closing down the valve to the toilet.
This also greatly reduces the noise as the toilet refills. Don't
do this if you tend to get people lined up for the facility though.
/Dave
|
55.43 | | USMRM2::CBUSKY | | Mon Jun 29 1987 11:59 | 15 |
| Re: "inverted cone thingamajigger with a single screw"
This sound like a pressure reducing valve. The screw on top is used to
adjust the pressure. On mine (a Watts) you turn "clockwise" to increase
the pressure. This probably will not solve your scalding shower problem
though.
It also sounds like you don't have an "anti-scald" shower valve or a
properly functioning one. These are required in most areas now for any
new plumbing or rework. They maintain the water temp. you set by
adjusting the hot and cold water automatically. So if some one flushes
the toilet, the only thing you notice in the shower is a reduction in
the flow, NOT A CHANGE IN THE TEMPATURE.
Charly
|
55.44 | Water Volume vs. Water Pressure | USMRM2::CBUSKY | | Mon Jun 29 1987 12:12 | 14 |
| Re: 26 years old
Besides the anit-scald valve that I just mentioned, you can have
adequate water pressure but not enough water volume.
Back in the good old days (26 years ago in your case), they probably
only used 1/2 pipe for all of your inside supply lines. This limits the
amount of water that can flow to the various fixtures. In my house
which was plumbed about 7 years ago, they used 3/4 inch pipe for the
major supply runs and branched off to the various fixutres with 1/2
inch pipe. This greatly reduces pressure drops when more than one thing
is turned on.
Charly
|
55.45 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Mon Jun 29 1987 13:52 | 8 |
| I doubt that changing the pressure would fix your problem. Your
problem is the pressure differential that develops between the hot
and cold water lines when somebody opens up a faucet (or flushes
the toilet, same thing) in the cold water line.
Changing the rate of fill on the toilet would help, or put in an
anti-scald shower valve. Or replace the (presumably) 1/2" lines
with 3/4", although if there is a significant flow restriction in
your water heater that might not help much.
|
55.46 | | MORMPS::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Mon Jun 29 1987 18:21 | 4 |
| tell me more about an anti-scald shower valve -
do I have to replace the hot and cold faucets?
thanx
|
55.47 | | HPSMEG::LUKOWSKI | I need an 'AUX' for my stereo | Tue Jun 30 1987 10:34 | 17 |
| An anti-scald shower valve is one faucet combining both hot and
cold faucets. The idea behind it is if you are taking a shower
and someone decides to wash the car, you won't get scalded. As
stated earlier, they mix the hot and cold water and when the supply
of cold water decreases, this valve decreases the amount of hot
water to make up for it. These things are not cheap but Spag's
does have good prices on them. I ended up getting the Symmons version
instead of the Delta. I'm not too keen on Delta. Also, with the
Delta, you have a choice of full water pressure or no pressure.
The Symmons will allow you to regulate the pressure. Don't let
places like Somerville scare you into thinking that you will not
be able to sell your house because you don't have one of these.
I suppose anything is possible but when was the last time you heard
of house not being sold because of a shower valve.
-Jim
|
55.48 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Tue Jun 30 1987 11:41 | 11 |
| Re: .13
Yes, you'd have to replace the whole works. If you have a single-
lever valve on the shower now it would be a moderate amount of work.
If you have individual faucets it could get pretty involved with
replumbing, especially if the shower comes from a diverter in the
spout that goes to the bathtub. Then you'd (probably) have to
completely redo the plumbing for the shower AND the bathtub.
Another thought; changing to a low-flow "water saver" shower
head might help some, too.
|
55.49 | Variation on .0's problem | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Thu Jul 28 1988 16:39 | 18 |
| I'm curious what is a reasonable water pressure for internal pipes.
Like .0, I get no water on the second floor of my old house when
water is running on the ground floor. But unlike .0, I have
all new copper pipes. All the valves are open, and the pressure
tank on my well stays around 70 psi (I think) with no water running.
If raising the water pressure can fix this, that'd be great. The
other thing I'm worried about is the pipe sizes. The pipe out of
the tankless water heater in my oil furnace is some size, I guess 3/4".
Then the pipe splits to feed the washer, with the same size pipe
coming in as going out. Then it splits again to feed the downstairs
bath/kitchen and the upstairs bath, again with the same size pipe
on all three sides of the T. Am I going to have to change the pipe
sizing to run water upstairs and downstairs at the same time?
Thanks,
Larry
|
55.53 | Meauring Water Pressure?? | AKOV11::BAUMEISTER | | Mon Oct 03 1988 12:06 | 7 |
| I was wondering if anyone could tell me how to measure water pressure
in a home? I have looked at all the notes on water pressure and
there does not seem to be one on how to measure water pressure.
Thanks.
Connie
|
55.54 | | MTWAIN::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Mon Oct 03 1988 13:49 | 8 |
| Here's one way. Buy a pressure gauge from a water pump supply place;
it will have, in all probability, a 1/4" pipe thread on it. Get
a tee fitting (and possibly an adapter bushing) to match that thread,
with the "run" of the tee matching your water pipe.
Cut your water pipe at the point you want to measure the pressure,
put in the tee, screw in the gauge, and turn the water back on (note:
you turned the water off before you cut the water pipe to put in
the tee....). Read the pressure on the gauge.
|
55.55 | Don't cut, unless you have to! | GWYNED::MCCABE | | Mon Oct 03 1988 14:12 | 6 |
| If you want to check the pressure without cutting the line buy a
3/4" hose fitting to 1/2" thread, and then screw in a 1/2" to 1/4"
reducer and then your gauge. I bought all the parts at Spags for
about $5. Just attatch to your outside water faucet, or an inside
faucet, to get your reading.
Chris
|
55.56 | | MTWAIN::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Mon Oct 03 1988 14:45 | 4 |
| .2 is definitely the way to go. I didn't realize you could get
an adapter for a sillcock that would adapt to pipe thread, but
it just goes to demonstrate, once again, that in plumbing you
can get the fittings to adapt anything to anything.
|
55.57 | just buy the right gauge ($4) | TFH::DONNELLY | Take my advice- Don't listen to me | Fri Oct 07 1988 18:41 | 4 |
| for $4 at spag's you can buy a pressure gauge that screws right onto a
garden hose type faucet. (also found at washing machines).
in fact, if you ask i'll send you mine through interoffice mail and you can
return it the same way. -craig
|
55.61 | Water pulsing in house | WAV12::LASHER | Ben Lasher Boston Software Services | Sun Dec 04 1988 22:18 | 22 |
| I recently moved into a house which has a well water system that I am
not very familiar with. The well is in the back yard and has a
silver capped pipe shaped device that sticks up out of the ground
about 12 inches. I assume that this is part of a pumping system.
Inside my garage is also some sort of device which also has
something to do with pumping water through the house. There appears
to be some sort of pressure tank along with associated hardware
and valve type devices. The previous owner had boxed all of this
stuff in with plywood and filled up the box with insulation.
The problem I am having is that the water in the house has started
to pulse as it comes out of the tap. It has gotten progressively
worse over the last few weeks. Also, this system in the garage
makes a banging noise with each pulse of the water out of the tap.
My guess is that air has gotten into this system somehow and
it needs to be primed or bled. Can anyone educate me as to how
this system works and how I might fix this problem?
Ben Lasher
|
55.62 | Possible Solution | WAV14::COLVIN | | Mon Dec 05 1988 10:30 | 38 |
| The devices in your garage are probably the pressure tank and regulator
equipment. Inside the tank is usually a rubber divider which separates
the tank into two chambers. The lower chamber (if the tank is vertical)
contains water pumped from the well by the pump, which is probably
submerged in the bottom of the well. The upper chamber contains
compressed air. Water is pumped into the tank, against the compressed
air (now being further compressed) until the pressure limit is reached
and the regulator shuts off the pump. When you open a faucet, it
is actually the compressed air which is pushing the water out. When
the pressure drops to the low limit, the regulator turns on the
pump until the high limit is again reached. This has several
advantages. The pump does not have to come on every time water is
drawn, saving waer and tear on the pump and added electricity to
start pump each time. The water flow is smoothed since there is
not the initial pressure drop and pulsations caused by pump phases.
A common problem which happens to these systems is that the compressed
air charge in the tank is lost over time, usually lost to the water
in the tank below the floating rubber seal. When this happens the
pump will cycle on and off frequently and pulsations will be felt.
The fix is to recharge the top chamber. Usually there will be a
valve on top of the tank for this purpose (looks a little lika a
tire valve). I would suggest, however, that if you are unfamiliar
with doing this, you should call a plumber or someone else familiar
with maintaining water wells to perform this. There is probably
a specific procedure (like draining some water and shutting off
the pump) while this is accomplished, as well as specific air pressure
to be put in. If you watch this process you could probably do it
yourself in the future.
This may not be the problem, but it is a common problem with wells.
It happened before to me as well as my brother-in-law. By the way,
the reason for insulation and enclosure in your garage is probably
to keep it from freezing if garage door was to be left open in winter.
Hope this helps,
Larry
|
55.63 | | MAMIE::DDODA | Long time Charlotte Hornets Fan | Mon Dec 05 1988 11:09 | 11 |
| What usually happens in this type of tank in that the rubber
bladder wears. If the bladder has indeed worn, the fix in .1 will
only last a week or so and you'll be "recharging" again. You MAY
be looking at a new tank if you want to fix the problem
permanently. If you do go for a new tank, there are better
designs on the market. Stay away from this bladder type system.
If you do decide to keep recharging, understand that the
inefficiency of the tank will put a strain on your pump.
Good luck
daryll
|
55.64 | Try this. | TALLIS::KENNEDY | | Mon Dec 05 1988 12:42 | 30 |
| I'm not sure that all tanks have a bladder. Mine is a fairly
old tank and the manual doesn't say anything about a bladder. In
any case I usually have to drain my tank about once a year. Sometimes
more often if we have run out of water in the well ( an occasional
happening at my house).
I do it by 1: turn off the pump.
2: turn off the isolation valve to the house.
3: Connect a hose to the drain valve of the tank
4: run the hose out on the lawn or to a drain
5: open the drain valve
6: drain all the water out of the tank. Note it is
sometimes necessary to add air pressure to the tank at the pressure
valve ( it looks a little like a valve stem of a bicycle tire on
mine). This is to overcome the vacuum that builds up in the sealed
tank while draining. This vacuum will cause you to not get the tank
fully drained and you won't get the full benefit of your labor.
7: When fully drained close the drain valve.
8: pressurize the tank to the recommended precharge
pressure. MIne is about 15 psi. If you have a compressor handy it's
easy. If you have an air tank that you can take to a compressor
and charge and then bring back to your water tank it'll take two
or three trips. Or you can connect a bicylce pump to the charge
valve and pump it up to presure. This will take awhile so bring
lots of arm power and a six pack to tide you over.
9: turn on the pump ( don't worry if you hear water
rushing into the tank mine always does that.)
10: presure is up. Turn on the water to the house.
11: Check the water flow and presure. If it's good
have a beer to celebrate. If it's bad have a beer to comiserate.
|
55.65 | re-pressurizing the tank | NACAD::SITLER | | Mon Dec 05 1988 13:26 | 56 |
| Older water tanks do not have a bladder. The water is in contact with
the pressurized air, and the air is eventually absorbed into the water.
Such a no-bladder system should be able to go years between recharges.
(Mine does.) Bladder systems were created to minimize (theoretically to
*eliminate*) the absorption and necessity for recharging.
The amount of recharge air-pressure determines the volume of water
pumped/extracted between the high and low pressure limits. There's a chart
near my pump giving the correspondence, but since I'm not at home and I
don't remember what's on the chart, I can't supply the numbers. Note 546.2
describes a system with min/max/air pressures of 20/40/25 psi.
FYI, the two pressure limits are set by two nuts pressing on springs in the
control box. (Actually, one is a limit adjustment and the other is an
offset adjustment.) There should be no need for you to change these
adjustments.
You simply need to put some air back into your tank. The procedure is
fairly straightforward.
Assuming your control box is mounted horizontally (cover-nut on top), the
ON position of the lever is horizontal. Turn the lever to the OFF position
(vertical), thereby turning off power to the pump. There should be a
twist-handle and an outlet (like an outside-the-house faucet) in the piping
at the base of the tank. Attach a garden hose, open the valve, drain the
tank, close the valve. (If you don't have such a valve, open the lowest
cold-water tap in the house to drain as much water out of the tank as
possible. Then close the tap.)
Now attach an air pump (e.g. for bicycle tires) to the air valve on the
side or top of the tank. (If the tank is not empty, you'll let some water
out and have to clean up later. Also, you'll have to get the water out of
the pump by operating it unattached.) Pump to the desired pressure. (Note
546.2 suggests 25 psi.) Remove the air pump. Now it's time to put water
back into the tank.
Switch the control-box lever back to the ON position. The water pump most
likely will come on -- you'll hear the pump (if it's an above-ground pump)
or you'll hear the water coming in (if you have a submersed pump). (And
you *did* remember to close the cold-water tap you opened earlier, right?)
If the pump does not come on, it must be primed. (Don't worry, it's
self-priming.) Push the control lever down beyond the ON position to the
non-latching (spring-return) PRIME position. Hold it there until the
pressure gauge comes up to a reasonable value, about 20 to 40 psi. If
there's no pressure gauge on the line (unlikely), hold the lever for 5 or
10 seconds, then release it (to the ON position) and listen for water
flowing.
You should be done now, but if not, try priming again. Do not hold the
lever in the PRIME position for more than 10 or 15 seconds, though, or you
could risk burning out the pump motor. (Don't be too alarmed. I don't
really think you'll burn out the motor *that* soon. I just don't want to be
blamed if you hold the lever too long and do burn out the motor. :-( )
Got water pressure? -- put the insulation back and go relax.
No? -- call your local well-and-pump company.
|
55.66 | notes-collision | NACAD::SITLER | | Mon Dec 05 1988 13:33 | 4 |
| Apologies to the author of .3, which says essentially what my .4 says.
When I started typing my note, .3 was not there. And after all that work,
I'd rather not just delete .4. Maybe the control-lever description
constitutes added value. :-)
|
55.67 | Thanks | WAV14::LASHER | Ben Lasher Boston Software Services | Mon Dec 05 1988 18:26 | 5 |
| Thanks for all the good info. In a few days, I'll get back to you
and let you know if I am having a beer to celebrate or a beer to
comiserate.
Ben
|
55.68 | Min > air charge | LEVEL::PORCHER | Tom, Terminals Firmware/Software | Wed Dec 07 1988 17:20 | 14 |
| The air pressure you charge the bladder with should be less than
the "min" or "cut-in" pressure on the pump control. For example (this
is the only one given on my pump) you charge wuth 18 psi if your cut-in is 20.
If you charge with more air pressure all the water must be forced out of the
tank for the pump to cut in. This results in a sudden drop in pressure when
the pump cuts in.
FYI, my bladder has the water on top and the air on the bottom. My pump
(shallow well) is mounted on top of the tank. Bladderless systems (which
I replaced 5 years ago) have an "air volume control" which prevents too
much air from being trapped in the tank. I don't think it helps to
keep *enough* air in the tank. But I don't have to worry about that now...!
--tom
|
55.69 | Replace the tank valve also. | WHEEL::KELMANSON | | Fri Dec 09 1988 12:43 | 7 |
| I have a bladderless tank and used the solution described with success.
Do replace the tank valve I discovered that was the reason for my
tank losing pressure. I calculated that to achieve 25psi with a
bicycle pump would take around 3000 pumps! I rigged up my 12volt
tire compressor and it did it in ~30mins.Thanks to Ben for raising
it and everyone who has contributed.
|
55.70 | SUCCESS! For now. | WAV14::LASHER | Ben Lasher Boston Software Services | Thu Dec 15 1988 00:01 | 49 |
| I'm back...and at this very moment I am having a beer to celebrate,
but not over confidently.
I shut off the pump ( I actually have a light switch installed over
the system which turns on and off power to the pump). Then I drained
what I could from the tank. Then, after closing the drains, I returned
power to the pump. Enough water was pumped into the tank to create
enough air pressure to be satisfactory throughout the house. I
also added a few hundred pumps from a HAND bicycle pump (don't have
anything else).
I turned on some faucets and:
- success, the pulsing was gone and water pressure was O.K.
- the water was disgusting.. I assume that I have not even been
using the water in the tank for months. The water has been coming
straight from the pump in the well. So I let the water run until
it cleared up, and, things are looking good.
I think what had happened was that the tank was completely filled
with water due to some kind of air leak (which I am looking for
now).
A couple more questions:
1.) I have little attachments to my outside water spickets which
seem to be designed to prevent anything (water or air) from traveling
back in the direction of the water system. Do these things play
a role in this type of system. (Hmmm, I removed one of those from
an outside spicket a few months ago).
2.) There is a unit attached to the water line coming from the well
to the tank. This unit appears to be an electrical device which
senses pressure and tells the pump to turn on. It seems to me that
I can pump air into the tank, but the well pump is only going to
pump water into the tank until it reaches a certain pressure,
reagrdless of the amount of air I pump into it. If this is true,
can I adjust this unit to allow the well pump to stay on longer?
There is some sort of adjustment screw on it, but it isn't labeled.
3.) Any guesses as to whether or not I have a bladder tank? The
house is 9 years old, and I am guessing this is the original system.
Sorry for being so lengthy......and thanks for the help.
Ben
|
55.71 | Anti-siphon valves | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Mon Jan 02 1989 10:37 | 19 |
|
1.) I have little attachments to my outside water spickets which
seem to be designed to prevent anything (water or air) from traveling
back in the direction of the water system. Do these things play
a role in this type of system. (Hmmm, I removed one of those from
an outside spicket a few months ago).
This sounds like an anti-siphon valve. It's there so that if your
pump fails and water starts flowing back down into your well, it
can't siphon dirty water from your hose (or from the mud puddle the
hose is laying in) back down into your well. There's an air gap
between the valve that fills your toilet tank and the water in the
tank for the same reason -- it's ok to siphon air back down into
your well, but I'd hate to have the toilet water mix in down there.
Sorry I don't know answers to your other questions.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
55.58 | Face to Face | OASS::B_RAMSEY | Bruce Ramsey | Wed Jan 11 1989 15:40 | 13 |
| Reading in the Ortho plumbing book it said to check the water pressure
at the front of the house where it enters via a hose spigot and
pressure guage. Then check the pressure on the back of the house
via a hose spigot. The pressure should be about 5 lbs less in the
back then the front due to all the plumbing in the house.
As a safety tip....
Have the face of the guage turned AWAY from you when turning on
the water. They have been known to blow apart. Once the water
is on, then check the guage. The inital blast of water down the
line and hitting a dead end apparently is more than some guages
can stand.
|
55.59 | Go slow, young man | AKOV13::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Wed Jan 11 1989 17:27 | 6 |
| Re .5
To alleviate the initial blast of water, why not turn the spigot
on slowly and ease the water into the guage?
Ed..
|
55.60 | The guage can be used to diagnose plumbing | DRUID::CHACE | winter's coming, so let's enjoy it! | Thu Jan 12 1989 09:27 | 0 |
55.72 | ramdom info | ATSE::GOODWIN | | Thu Mar 02 1989 14:03 | 33 |
| Unless you are having a problem with the water pressure, like too high,
too low, too wide a range between pump cycles, or too short a range
between cycles, you shouldn't need to adjust the pressure switch. All
that switch does is regulate turn-on and turn-off pressures for the
pump. In the system I used to have, the turn on was about 20 lbs and
the turn off about 40. That is fairly low pressure if you are used to
city water or higher pressure well systems, most of which don't exceed
60 lbs. How high you need the pressure to be depends on how high your
highest water outlet is and on how much pressure you feel you need.
Like everything else there are lots of tradeoffs.
Mine was a shallow well system with the pump in the basement instead of
in the well, so it had a thing called an aspirator on the tank which
automatically kept the air level about half tank. It had a feedback
line to the pump. I don't know if you can get such a thing for an
in-the-well pump setup or not. At 20-40 lbs (average 30), the tank
would be half full of water (on average) if I just drained it and then
allowed the pump to fill it until the pressure cut it off. I didn't
have to pump any additional air into it. If you have higher pressures
then you will have less average air in the tank, but the drain and fill
method still ought to work OK with no additional air pumping.
You probably wouldn't want to go over 60 lbs of water pressure, if the
switch adjustment will even let you. That could cause frequent valve
failure and exploding garden hoses.
By the way, the anti siphon valves are required by law in many places
now for safety. There have in the past been instances where ground
water contaminated with toxic or bacteriological substances got sucked
back into water systems during water pressure outages. There have been
whole communities poisoned in this way, although since you have a well,
I suppose only your household would be at risk.
|
55.74 | High water pressure problem - city water | SSDEVO::MARKS | | Wed Mar 15 1989 17:56 | 30 |
| I have been experiencing a strange phenomenon with the water pressure
in my house. I have noticed water on the basement floor immediately
below the overflow tube which is situated vertically along the side
of our gas water heater. In addition, I have noticed that the water
pressure at the faucets is momentarily higher than normal when the
water is first turned on. This momentary pressure surge occurs
with either hot or cold water selected. The pressure drops to normal
after a few seconds of running the water. Also, this momentary
high pressure is not always observed when the water faucets are
used. My neighbor says he has not experienced this in his house.
There appears to be be two pressure regulators on our water supply.
| |
house sprinkler
supply supply
| |
| |
| |
O Reg. |
| |
+------------|
|
|
----M-------O--------> to street
meter Reg.
Any ideas why this is happening to our water pressure?
Randy Marks
|
55.75 | Dynamic vs. Static pressure | ENGINE::PAULHUS | Chris @ MLO6B-2/T13 dtn 223-6871 | Thu Mar 16 1989 11:44 | 8 |
| In any pressurized fluid system, you have two types of pressure:
static and dynamic. Static pressure is what you get with no flow,
that is, no pressure losses from passage thru turns, valves, etc.
Dynamic pressure is what you get when the static pressure is reduced
(depending on flow velocity thru losses) by the dynamic losses.
When you turn the tap on, you initially recieve the full static
pressure. It quickly drops to the dynamic pressure value because
of the water movement in the pipes thru the losses. - Chris
|
55.76 | 2 things to check | RUBY::J_MAHON | | Thu Mar 16 1989 16:11 | 13 |
| How is the temperature of the hot water? Check the thermostat on
the hot water tank. Sounds like the pressure relief valve is opening
on the water tank and running onto the basement floor because of
an overheating condition. This could account for the overall pressure
increase.
If that isn't it, the pressure regulator valve located at or near
where the water pipe enters the house is adjustable. I forget which
way to turn the screw on it but one way or the other, you can reduce
water pressure to the whole house this way if need be.
jack
|
55.77 | Any other thoughts? | SSDEVO::MARKS | | Thu Mar 16 1989 17:48 | 14 |
| The hot water temperature agrees with the setting on the thermostat.
We keep the temp. fairly low, as a matter of fact. The problem
with adjusting the pressure regulator is that will affect the
"steady-state" pressure of the water, which is just fine. What
I want to do is eliminate the pressure surge which occurs when a
faucet is initially turned on.
re: .1
I understand that there is a distinction between static and dynamic
pressure. Basically what I am saying is that my dynamic pressure
is just fine. The static pressure is too high. In every other
house, apartment, hotel or motel I have lived in, the static pressure
did not exceed the dynamic pressure. What is causing the high static
pressure?
|
55.78 | adjust the pressure regulators | CLOSUS::HOE | toddlin' Sam's daddy | Fri Mar 17 1989 16:12 | 12 |
| Randy,
Try backing out the screw a few turns on the second pressure
regulator that's on the leg feeding your house supply. If you're
in the NE area, there's a few new water tanks that has been put
on line and that may be the increase in your pressure.
I have a water pressure gauge you may borrow. Call me at DTN
526-2219. I am in KDT, just north of CXN.
cal hoe
|
55.79 | All that pressure and nowhere to go | ATSE::GOODWIN | | Tue Mar 21 1989 14:35 | 22 |
| Check out the regulator - will it allow water to flow backward?
Some do and some don't. If it is the type that does not allow backward
flow then here's your problem:
After you use a bunch of hot water, the hot water tank will heat up the
new cold water that has come into it. As this water heats up it
expands. In a water system with no regulator the expansion would
simply push water back out the inlet pipes toward the street. However,
if water can't get back out the regulator, and if all the water taps
are closed, and if there is no expansion tank anywhere in the system,
then the only place the water can go is out the pressure relief valve.
I understand that some regulators don't allow back flow. Systems with
those types of regulators need an expansion tank to absorb the
increased volume from water heater expansion.
If you already have an expansion tank, then check it to make sure it is
full of air. Sometimes they can lose their air for one reason or
another and they need to be refilled or replaced, depending on the
problem. When the water expands it compresses the air in the tank, and
when a valve is open the air expands back to its original volume to
balance the water pressure in the system.
|
55.80 | | SALEM::M_TAYLOR | Keep Right--Except to Pass | Thu Mar 23 1989 14:55 | 35 |
| .5's got it. The only problem is that an expansion tank *always*
will allow a pressure build-up to occur if it is not calibrated
to the exact conditions at your house. The expansion tank has to
be initially charged to a pressure *greater than* the top working
pressure of the system, else it will partially fill every time you
shut the water off at some point of use. As you turn on water, this
release of pressure from the expansion tank will coincide with water
pressure coming into the house and provide additional pressure until
the tank empties. One problem I can see here is that if the pressure
regulator valve has a slow leak through it, pressure will steadily
increase into your potable water system *until* the pressure is
*equal to* the street pressure. When you start to run water, this
high pressure will bleed off and then the pressure regulator valve
will begin to function as per normal. In this case, the valve is
OK in normal function, but defective in terms of stopping water
flow 100% when there is no usage. The valve could be leaking slowly
in the direction of hi pressure to low pressure. The more I think
about this, the less I feel there is an expansion tank problem.
There probably isn't an expansion tank at all in this particular
house! As far as the bad regulator valve, (reducing valve, if you
prefer) if you're the DIY-er--type, depressurize your system, isolate
the reducer valve, and take the screws out that dot the perimeter
of the conical base. The valve will pop apart--be careful. You may
want to back all of the screws out gradually. At this point, you
will see a diaphram across the opening you have just exposed. At
the base of this diagphram, you will witness the actual seat of
the valve which lifts to let water pressure through to your service
entry. This seat must be in top condition, or the above-mentioned
leakage will occur. As with any valve, the seat has a matching surface
wich must be just as clean as above. Kits should be available for
reair of these valves, but if you just want it fixed, period, a
valve replacement is in order. Price? $50 for the valve, plus labor
if you're not up for it.
Mike
|
55.82 | Main shutoff valve for water springs a leak | SMAUG::WOODS | | Tue Mar 28 1989 13:21 | 35 |
| My main shutoff valve for my water supply has sprung a leak (see diagram
below). If I close the valve totally the leak stops, and the further I
open it, the more it leaks (all the way from a slow drip to a medium trickle).
To fix this situation I assume I need to remove the whole valve assembly by
unscrewing points A and B and put a new one in? I'm no plumber, but this
should be a fairly easy DIY job?
Since this is the main shutoff point, and there are no other valves
between here and my pump, how do I stop the water while I have this
pipe apart? If I simply cut the power to my well pump, will I still lose
all the water in the reserve tank?
Thanks for any suggestions.
^
|
into
house
leaking out of here
| | /
| | /
B |----| /
| |____ /
| |/ +
| |====+
| ___| +
| |
A |----| ^
| | |
main shutoff valve
out to
well
|
v
|
55.83 | Tighten the gland (packing) nut... | BEING::PETROVIC | Looking for a simpler place & time... | Tue Mar 28 1989 13:55 | 16 |
| re: leaking shutoff valve...
The leak is caused by the gland nut (sometimes referred to as the
packing nut) becoming dried out over the years. In fact, its
quite common to even new valves to seep leak a little. Repair is
effected in either of two ways: First, try taking a wrench to the
gland nut and tightening it a little, turning the valve stem
while you do the wrenching. Do it gently and the leak *should*
stop. If this fails, you can rebuild the valve packing with new
material purchased at your local hardware store's plumbing
department. Fortunately, these valves are fairly common and the
packing material can be had in both a washer-shaped configuration
or in the form of a graphite impregnated cord which you form
around the valve stem into the shape and size you need.
You needn't buy a new valve to fix this kind of leak.
|
55.84 | Just tighten the packing nut a little! | CSMET2::CHACE | let's go fishin' | Tue Mar 28 1989 14:07 | 9 |
|
This type of leak is VERY common on any valve that has a stem packing
and isn't used much. When you finally do use it, the packing (which
has taken a set because it hasn't been used) starts leaking. It
is quite normal. All you need to do - is tighten the packing
nut *slightly* - slightly being just enough to stop the leak - but
NOT enough to make the valve hard to turn.
Kenny
|
55.90 | Water Use Rule of Thumb? | KIRKWD::FRIEDMAN | | Fri May 05 1989 17:43 | 1 |
| How many gallons of water are used a day by a typical person?
|
55.91 | Dicky says | TRITON::FERREIRA | | Mon May 08 1989 08:30 | 5 |
| If memory serves... about a month ago Dick Albert, (ch5 weather)
did a quicky on water conservation. I beleive he said an average
of 25 gallons/person/day, including several flushed, baths/showers,
brushing teeth, meals, shaving, washing hands........ Surprising
|
55.92 | As much as 75 gal/day! | CSMET2::CHACE | let's go fishin' | Mon May 08 1989 12:22 | 14 |
|
Sorry, but I belive Dick A. was talking about how much COULD be
consumed by someone who was practicing water conservation. I think
the general rule of thumb (no counting a lot of conservation) for
water usage was 75 gals., per person, per day. Figure it out, even
a water conserving toilet uses 2 gals per flush (3 for a normal
one). Three gals/min is a low average for a shower (many go as high
as 10 gallons per minute!) Washing (other than showers/baths) doesn't
account for that much, but at an average of 5 gallons per min, a
ten minute shower (mine are more like 20) uses 50 gallons alone!
And if you've been working out or working around the yard you may
very well take 2 showers or baths in one day!
Kenny
|
55.93 | Thanks for the correction Ken. | TRITON::FERREIRA | | Mon May 08 1989 13:16 | 2 |
|
|
55.94 | ...and if you wash the car, or water the lawn... | MISFIT::DEEP | Are you suggesting coconuts migrate? | Mon May 08 1989 14:41 | 5 |
|
...and don't forget laundry and dishes....
Bob
|
55.95 | a global perspective | AKOV88::LAVIN | Oh, It's a profit deal | Mon May 08 1989 17:19 | 6 |
| I saw a recent figure of 330 gals/day/person. I think this included
all of the water used by industry and the like in support of you.
Obviously this has nothing to do with estimating water usage in
the home, but, I didn't know what else to do with this information
other than post it here.
|
55.96 | Drastic conservation. | LUDWIG::BOURGAULT | | Tue May 09 1989 05:04 | 27 |
| Just to put a different perspective on it....
Imagine what it was like in the days of the wooden
sail-powered warships, when the usual ration of fresh
water, per person, was one PINT per day! (Yes, there
was some used in cooking, etc.. PERSONAL use was a
mere....) With "working outdoors", eating well-salted
food, etc., this must have been interesting to do.
I understand, from my readings, that there were occasional
"orgies" allowed - when the supply ship with the fresh
water pulled up alongside. First thing that happened was
that EVERYbody drank.... then the barrels were refilled,
then everybody drank again.... then the supply ship pulled
away, the armed guard was posted at the water barrel(s),
and it was back to a pint a day. A couple of weeks later,
the water started turning green and slimy....
I can imagine that a ship stopping at an island (Pacific
voyages took months...) with fresh water was a MAJOR
cause for celebration. Imagine, after weeks of short
water rations, being able to immerse yourself in the stuff!!
Sometimes I wonder how we (I) would have done in those
situations....
- Ed -
|
55.97 | It's easy to use a lot of water... | PSTJTT::TABER | It offends my freakin' dignity | Tue May 09 1989 09:25 | 14 |
| > I saw a recent figure of 330 gals/day/person. I think this included
> all of the water used by industry and the like in support of you.
Actually, it might not be too outrageous as an in-home figure. Baths and
showers take a lot of water. I've heard that a typical shower takes 100
gallons. I laughed that off as impossible until I plugged the tub and
measured the water that collected during a shower. It's more than half a
tub full, and if you consider a 2x5x3 bathtub = 30 cubic feet @ 7.5 gallons
per cubic foot (it sounds high, but that's what it says in the Engineer's
Desk Reference...) = 225 gallons. Add in laundry, cooking, drinking, toilet
flushing (@5 to 7 gallons a flush) and so on and it could easily come up
to 330 if you were a bath-taker.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
55.98 | yeeech | AKOV68::LAVIN | Oh, It's a profit deal | Tue May 09 1989 10:01 | 6 |
|
> cause for celebration. Imagine, after weeks of short
> water rations, being able to immerse yourself in the stuff!!
I've heard that they rarely immersed themselves in those
days, water available or not .
|
55.99 | 7.5 ??? | CASV01::DUNN | | Tue May 09 1989 11:57 | 10 |
|
re. -.?
Are you SURE it's 7.5 gal / cu ft?
I'm looking at the gal milk jug I have in my office for the plants,
and compared to a cu ft, it doesn't look like I'd get 7 1/2 of them in
there.
|
55.100 | You have to remove the milk from the 1 gallon jugs | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Tue May 09 1989 12:05 | 10 |
| > I'm looking at the gal milk jug I have in my office for the plants,
>and compared to a cu ft, it doesn't look like I'd get 7 1/2 of them in
>there.
You're right. It doesn't look like it.
Do you know how big a 10 gallon aquarium is? They aren't very big.
The dimensions are only around 10"x12"x16". That's only a little
over a square foot and you can fit 10 of your milk jugs in.
|
55.101 | Volume adds up fast as dimensions increase | BEING::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Tue May 09 1989 12:25 | 7 |
| I was really surprised when I first saw that 7� figure also. But a quick look
at a milk jug I have here in my office (ask me another time why), it seems to
be about 6"x6"x7"=252 cu in. A cubic foot is 12"x12"x12"= 1728 cu in.
Divided, that comes out to 6.85, and if you subtract the volume in the jug for
the rounded corners, it comes out about right.
Paul
|
55.102 | he's right | TROA01::PONEILL | Peter O'Neill DTN 631-7093 | Tue May 09 1989 12:26 | 6 |
| It did not sound right to me, so I looked it up and he is right,
there are 7.48052 U.S. gallons in 1 qubic foot.
Amazing....
Peter
|
55.103 | I did it out also... | CASV01::DUNN | | Tue May 09 1989 13:00 | 19 |
|
I did it too, according the the 'authoritative source' I had handy.....
According to American Heritage:
1 liter = 1.057 quarts (liquid measure)
1 liter = 61 cu in
1.057 quarts = 61 cu in
(1.057 qts) (1gal / 4 qts) = (61 cu in) (1 cu ft / 1728 cu in)
.26425 gal = .035300925 cu ft (eek, too many signficant digits ;^) )
7.4856 gal = 1 cu ft
It still doesn't seem correct visually using the milk jug, but using
the aquarium example it's much more believable.
|
55.104 | | PSTJTT::TABER | It offends my freakin' dignity | Tue May 09 1989 15:12 | 9 |
| I have to laugh at the number of people who have had to work it out. I didn't
believe it either when I first read it, which is why I mentioned that I looked
it up rather than asking anyone to take it on faith.
The first time I read it, I had to make "a cubic foot" out of paper before
I'd believe it. I had always had a hard time accepting that my waterbed
took 200 gallons... 200 gallons should be HUGE! But in reality, it's not
very large at all.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
55.105 | Some actual data... | FROST::WALZ | Gary Walz | Tue May 09 1989 16:11 | 20 |
|
Getting back to the original question...
We're on a small water system (33 households). To approve a system
as a public water supply, the state looks for a capacity of 300
gallons a day, assuming an average 4 person household.
Actual monitoring of our consumption shows that on a typical weekend,
when useage is highest, we average about 12,000 gallons per day.
I estimate an average of about 3.5 people per house, 33 houses, so
our weekend useage workd out to about 104 gallons/day/person.
On a weekday, the consumption is down more in the area of 6-7,000
gallons a day.
Because of the drought last summer, we've curtailed most outside
water useage, so if you were going to wash cars, water lawns, etc,
the consumption would be considerably higher.
-Gary
|
55.106 | Boston Edison says.. | RAMBLR::MORONEY | It works!! | Tue May 09 1989 21:44 | 7 |
| According to a flyer included with my Boston Edison electric bill, "each of
us uses at least 60 gallons of water a day, much of which can be saved"
(Don't know how much I trust Boston Edison as an authority on this, since
last I knew, Boston Edison sells me electricity, not water.)
-Mike
|
55.117 | Banging water pipes | SALEM::PAGLIARULO_G | | Tue May 09 1989 23:29 | 14 |
| Haven't seen this in other plumbing notes so here goes.
Last year I redid a bathroom in my house which included changing
the tub and sink. For the tub I changed the plumbing from separate
hot and cold outlets to that needed for a mixing valve. The sink
plumbing stayed pretty much the same. Now when the water is turned
on (cold) at either the sink or tub the pipe pounds. In the cellar
you can see it banging back and forth. Anyone know what causes this
and what the cure is? I suppose it's air but what do I do about
it?
Thanks,
George
|
55.107 | I thought they fixed that | AKOV88::LAVIN | | Wed May 10 1989 09:21 | 6 |
|
> (Don't know how much I trust Boston Edison as an authority on this, since
> last I knew, Boston Edison sells me electricity, not water.)
... and another managment problem surfaces at Boston Ed ...They
don't remember what business they're in ! 8-)
|
55.108 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Wed May 10 1989 10:24 | 11 |
| Pardon the diversion again, but.....
...from "commonly known" facts:
- water weighs 62.5 lbs./cubic foot
- a gallon of water weighs about 8 lbs
(a pint's a pound the whole world round)
62.5 lbs./cu ft
--------------- = 7.8 gallon/cu ft, close to 7.5
8 lbs./gallon
|
55.109 | T.A. EDISON IS DEAD. | CSSE::CACCIA | the REAL steve | Wed May 10 1989 14:50 | 11 |
| How about if CON ED or in this case Boston Edison were counting on
selling you 60 gallon of HOT water a day?�?
8*) �!CONSERVE WATER SHOWER WITH A FRIEND!� 8*)
|
55.118 | Air Chambers | CSCMA::LEMIEUX | | Wed May 10 1989 14:52 | 32 |
| Hi,
Did the old plumbing have air chambers installed near the fixtures
for each (hot & cold)feed? Probably inside the wall space.
Various fixtures shut the flow of water off quicker than others,
so what you get is water slamming against the end of the closed
valve, the quicker the shut-off of water the more chances of the
pipes hammering.
Most plumbers install an air chamber at the end of the water
pipe, ususally near the area that the pipes turn through the wall
to go to the fixture. They are Commercially available, but most
plumbers who install them, make their own, by using a short length
of pipe that is dead-ended with a cap. By nature of the short pipe
being dead-ended, it will always hold some air when the pipe is
filled, and it is this air that absorbs the hammer effect of the
column of water.
It may be possible that if you do have chambers on your plumbing
that they somehow filled with water, sometimes the water, if left
standing still for a length of time will absorb this air. In that
case, all you have to do is shut off the water, drain the pipes
completely, and refill them. The air in the pipes will go to the
chambers, and it should be OK....No more banging.
If you don't already have chambers, you might try adding some,
even if you did not add it to the end of the pipe, but instead added
it to the last elbow in the basement before the pipe went upstairs.
Paul
|
55.119 | | SALEM::PAGLIARULO_G | | Wed May 10 1989 16:07 | 13 |
| My daughter was taking a shower last night and the cold water pipe was
banging the whole time, really jumping around. The vanity faucet bangs
when you shut the water off so the air answer sounds logical for that but
what about the shower? I got rid of a lot of the noise by temporarily
taping the cold pipe to the hot pipe next to it so that the pipe didn't
hit the joist and waste pipe that it is next to. I'm concerned, though,
about what the constant vibration will eventually do to the joints.
As far as the air chambers you're talking about - are they similar
to the lengths of pipe used below outlets in gas lines?
George
|
55.120 | Gas Pipe Sediment Leg | CSCMA::LEMIEUX | | Wed May 10 1989 17:03 | 12 |
| George,
The gas pipe configuration that mention is more commonly
known as "Drip leg or sediment leg" It traps any Gunk that might
be floating around in the gas pipes. The Air chambers I mentioned
would look the same as the Sediment Leg, only they would be oriented
in the other direction, so that they would trap air.
Do you happen to know what your water pressure is in PSI?
Are you on city water or on a well?
Paul
|
55.121 | Pointers 956,1907,2162,2424 | OASS::B_RAMSEY | My hovercraft is filled with eels. | Wed May 10 1989 17:20 | 8 |
| SET HAT=acting_as_a_moderator
Before this note gets too many more replies...
This topic has been discussed at length in notes 956,1907,2162,2424.
Found these by looking at note 1111.80 PLUMBING-SUPPLY.
SET HAT=normal_noter
|
55.122 | As mentioned in .5, plus 459 and 2853 | BEING::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Wed May 10 1989 17:49 | 22 |
| Shame on you George! :^) :^) :^) :^) :^) :^) :^) :^) :^) :^) :^) :^) :^)
The rest of you sure are fast, 4 replies before I could get here.
This note has been temporarily write-locked pending approval of the author.
To the author: This subject is already under discussion in this file, under the
topics listed in the title. Please look at these notes; you may find that your
question is already answered, or you may find a note where your question would
be an appropriate continuation of the discussion. Note that since nearly
everyone uses NEXT UNSEEN to read notes, your question will get the same
exposure whether it is a response to a two-year-old note or it is its own new
note. These topics were found using the keyword directory (note 1111), and you
may find other notes relating to this subject by examining the directory
yourself.
We do, however, welcome new notes if they explore a specific aspect of a
problem that may be under general discussion. And this moderator has been
known to make mistakes. :^) So if after examining these notes, you wish to
continue the discussion here, send me mail.
Paul [Moderator]
|
55.110 | John Belushi was right! | REINER::SULLIVAN | There's a time and a place for spontaneity | Wed May 10 1989 21:17 | 14 |
| re .6
>> Imagine what it was like in the days of the wooden
>> sail-powered warships, when the usual ration of fresh
>> water, per person, was one PINT per day! (Yes, there
>> was some used in cooking, etc.. PERSONAL use was a
>> mere....) With "working outdoors", eating well-salted
>> food, etc., this must have been interesting to do.
So that's why they had drool buckets! A water reclaimation system!!!
Too bad they didn't have Aridus still suits :-)
|
55.111 | Any benifit ??? | VICKI::DODIER | | Thu May 11 1989 12:23 | 20 |
| re:15
What benifit (if any) is there in being a public water supply?
At 300 gallons a day, my well (as most wells) would qualify. 300
gallons a day is nothing.
With a recovery rate of a mere � gallon a minute, you could
recover 720 gallons a day. I know of wells that have 7-10 gallon/min.
recovery rates. The only catch 22 is that you have to have enough
distance between your static leval (the maximum height of the water
in the well) and where your pump is to be able to store that much
water. A rough estimate is that each foot of 9" pipe holds approx.
1� gallons. If your pump was only 100 ft. below the static leval,
you can only recover up to 150 gallons.
This difference between my static leval and my pump is 500
feet so I should have enough water for awhile :-)
Ray
|
55.112 | | FROST::WALZ | Gary Walz | Thu May 11 1989 13:58 | 15 |
|
Re: -.1
What benifit (if any) is there in being a public water supply?
At 300 gallons a day, my well (as most wells) would qualify. 300
gallons a day is nothing.
No benefit. It's just the way the development we live in was set up.
Our wells (2 producing, 6 dry holes), run about 900 feet, so it was
cost effective(for the developer) to set up a shared system.
We have a 10,000 gallon reservoir that's usually sufficient, but with
last summer's drought, we couldn't quite fill in a day, hence the
problem when our useage ran up to 12,000 gallons a day on the weekend.
-gary
|
55.113 | 10 gallons a day for two people! | FSHQA1::DWILLIAMS | | Thu May 11 1989 15:01 | 7 |
| As a member of the U.S. Peace Corps I lived in a small village
in India and my partner and I never had more than ten gallons of
water a day between us. The ten gallons of water served our house
cleaning, personal hygeine and cooking needs. Yes, we managed quite
well once we learned how to conserve. It was quite easy, really.
Douglas
|
55.114 | Hope we don't get arrested! | REINER::SULLIVAN | There's a time and a place for spontaneity | Fri May 12 1989 13:34 | 3 |
| Our well had a recovery rate of 42 gal/min. when they stopped measuring! I've
often wondered if one of the Quabbin Reservoir pipelines goes through my
back yard. :-)
|
55.115 | 75 person-gallon-day | CIMNET::MOCCIA | | Fri May 12 1989 15:21 | 6 |
| Home water treatment companies use 75 gals/person/day as the
basis for system installation. This is right in line with
the perviously mentioned 330 gals/day for a family of four.
pbm
|
55.116 | 75 gal/person/day here. | TFH::DONNELLY | Take my advice- Don't listen to me | Sat May 13 1989 00:55 | 5 |
| just got a bill. adds up to 75 gal per person per day. there's only two
of us. we're gonna' try to cut down. i think it's mostly the shower and
toilets.
craig
|
55.85 | Can't turn the valve | MAMTS1::JLISTON | Jim Liston | Tue Aug 29 1989 10:05 | 10 |
| I have a problem with my main shut off valve. It will not shut
off the water supply to my house. It probably needs a new washer.
In order to work on it I will have to shut off the water supply
at the curb (City Water). I bought a curb key. Now here is my
problem. I can't shut off the water. The valve will not turn.
I am reluctant to apply too much pressure as I don't want to break
it. Is there anything I can do, short of digging down to the valve
and trying to free it.
Thanks ... Jim
|
55.86 | Check with the Town first | SNDCSL::HAUSRATH | Pass that by me again, please | Tue Aug 29 1989 10:55 | 14 |
|
Which side of the meter is the main shutoff on? If it's before
the meter, then the water company (Town?) should owns it. Have them
come out and fix it, it'll save you a lot of aggrevation.
I had a similar problem, except my shutoff was stuck in the off
position (I turned it off to do some minor (HA) repairs).
It turns out that the shaft of the valve snapped. I called the
town, and they had there plumbers out there that day.
Good luck
/Jeff
|
55.87 | | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Tue Aug 29 1989 12:28 | 8 |
| In Hudson, MA, according to the DPW, I own everything inside the
house, but only the town can work upstream of the water meter. So
they replaced the valve, and said it would cost $30. I haven't yet
seen the bill (they did the work last Friday.) They were very good
about coming out on short notice, despite the fact that the
problem wasn't an emergency (or even serious.)
--David
|
55.88 | Ditto for Hudson | CNTROL::KING | | Tue Aug 29 1989 14:23 | 3 |
| Correct about Hudson, MA. I had mine replaced in the house because I
couldn't turn the incoming water off completely. They came out promptly
and replaced it. I think it cost around 31.75
|
55.89 | you own it!! | TWOBOS::LAFOSSE | | Wed Aug 30 1989 09:59 | 63 |
| We just had that fiasco happen to us last year (2 weeks before xmas).
WE had just purchased the house in june and hadn't been there 6
months when one night the water main blew the valve/meter right
off the wall in the celler, luckly we were home. The celler had
5 inches of water in less than 15 minutes. WE had the fire dept
there (9:30 pm) but they couldn't shut off the water because they
didn't have the key for the valve from the road to the house, and
the key they had was for rest of the street and they certainly
wern't going to shut down the whole street (West St. Leominster)
because the hydrants were on the same valve. they tried to sledge
hammer in a couple of different size chalks but the pressure was
to high (was told later that our St had the highest water pressure in
town).
Meanwhile we now had close to a foot of water and the previous owner
had cemented over the trap. To top all this off the water dept
had the only key to the valve (which by the way is covered with
tar) and there all out at their christmas banquet. 2 hours later
they show up in suit and tie, and hammer in a 2 ft length of what
appeared to be a broom handle. They would be back to fix the rest
later.
This finally stopped the water, which the fire dept had diverted
through a 1 1/2" hose which had to be hand held out to the street.
(try holding onto a loose fitting hose under 90+ psi with freezing
cold water squirting out all over for 2 1/2 hours)
The Water dept came back at 2 in the am to finally shut the water
off at the road. They first had to jack hammer the road to get
to the valve. shut it off.... and proceeded into the cellerwhich
now only had 6-10" of water to pull out the broom handle (ya sure)
and attach the new valve.
The guy broke the handle off, and using my recipro saw, and 1/2"
demolition drill with a 16" bit proceeded to ream out the wood stuck
in the main.
(this next thing kinda didn't make sense to me)
He attached the new 90 degree valve, then blew out the crap in the
pipe.
(i thought you'd want to blow out the crud wood before ataching
the elbow vlave) he hooks up the meter, turns on the water and says
if its leaking call him and they'll check it out in the morning. Now
I got all this sh*t floating around in my water. next morning i
get up and the celler has another 3 inches of water in it, turns
out they punctured the main before the foundation. now they attach
a hose from the neighbors house to mine with the temperature hovering
close to 0... twice the hose froze, we were on the hose for a 10
days.
Next day I get a nifty little form letter saying "we have inpected
the water problem at your address, you are responsible for for all
costs incurred to repair/replace anything from the road to the house".
And oh, btw, you have 30 days to make any such repairs, here is
list of contractors....
Got quotes from anywhere between $1500-$2700
all this just 2 weeks before christmas.... oh the joys of home
ownership!
Fra
|
55.81 | An update on the symptoms | SSDEVO::MARKS | | Thu Aug 31 1989 13:54 | 22 |
| Sorry about not getting back to this note sooner. I think .5 and/or .6
are the answers I was looking for. Since I posted this note, I placed
a coffee can under the overflow tube and one under the drain spiggot.
I did this last night (should have thought of it much earlier), so
results are a bit preliminary. It appears that the water on the floor
is not actually coming from the overflow tube - it is coming from the
drain spiggot. I think the remedy there is to buy a threaded cap and
install it on the spiggot which is apparently leaky. So the water on
the floor is not related to the pressure fluctuation I described in .0.
I haven't adjusted the pressure regulator because I didn't really think
that was the problem. Adjusting it would probably change the normal
pressure but not affect the fluctuation. There is no expansion tank
that I can see. The regulator not allowing backflow as .5 mentioned
may be a possibility. I guess only a discussion with a plumbing supply
outfit will answer that question. If it does allow backflow, then a
valve problem as mentioned in .6 is to be suspected.
Looks like I have some work to do. I'll reply with a summary of what I
find. Thanks for all the suggestions and helpful info.
Randy
|
55.73 | | AISVAX::TAYLOR | | Wed Jan 31 1990 08:39 | 20 |
| After reading all these replys, I think I could have the same
problem as Re.0, but I have city water, every once in a while
the water will start to pulse, with all the faucets shut off
I can hear a loud "tick-tock" sound echoing thru the pipes, it
will do this for a minute or so and then stop, if I go into the
basement and slowly turn off the main water supply shut off, it
will stop and shutting it off slowly I can hear the water pulsing
thru the lines. Now if it make a difference, I too have one of these
expansion tanks with a schrader (sp?) valve hanging off of one of
the pipes.
Should I check the pressure in the tank, what is a good pressure,
I really wasn't going to bother with it as I'll be doing alot
of plumbing changes when I put a 2nd floor on my house at the
end of February...
thanks
Royce
|
55.123 | HELP! High water bill | JUPITR::ST_MARTIN | | Mon Mar 19 1990 22:16 | 17 |
| I did a directory search and also checked out the index at 1111 but
found nothing on my problem.
I just received my water bill from the city of Worcester for $320.00
They say I used 147,000 cu./ft. of water for a 6 month
period.Calculated out this equals over 1,099,633.5 gal. for the 6
months or 6,042 gals.a day.
I contacted the water company and the head of the water company with
no satisfation at all.Both responses were that I used this much water
and that there is nothing wrong with my meter.I do plan on contesting
this bill. What I would like to know is if anybody has had any
problems with there meters going bad resulting in high bills.Has anyone
contested a high water bill with any luck??
Any help with this would be greatly appreciated..
Thanks
Rich
|
55.124 | So thats where Worcester's water has been going | OPUS::CLEMENCE | | Mon Mar 19 1990 22:33 | 19 |
| Boy do you use water! Can I bring over my car to be washed?
I have heard of another problem like this from a friend who got a
wopper of an electric bill. In his case the utilities misread the meter.
I think he won his case by proving that he couldn't have drawn that much
current by calculating out his max amp service for the month and it was off by
more than 10,000 KW. from his bill. This proved to the utility that his meter
should be looked into and was determined that the meter was read wrong.
First is the readings correct to the meter readings?
If you turn on a faucet does the meter spin wildly?
If you could prove either one of those things it should at least
prompt the utility to check the meter out. If it proven defective, then you
should be only paying for the correct reading or if the meter is bad an
average water use for your size family.
Bill
|
55.125 | correction. | JUPITR::ST_MARTIN | | Mon Mar 19 1990 23:21 | 3 |
| It looks like I figured it out wrong.It sould be 14,700 cu./ft which
would equal out to over 600 gals a day.Which is still extremly high
for a family of 3. Again,help would be appreciated..Rich
|
55.126 | | NITMOI::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Tue Mar 20 1990 07:53 | 9 |
| Another thing to check:
With all your faucets turned off, how much water do you use?
Check the meter before everyone leaves the house, and check it again before
using the water when someone returns. Perhaps there is a leak in your system,
like, in an outside, underground pipe?
Also, check when the water company last read your meter. Perhaps they have been
(under)estimating the bill for a while, and finally got a real reading?
|
55.127 | | ALLVAX::DIAMOND | No brag, Just fact. | Tue Mar 20 1990 11:28 | 10 |
|
re .3
If there's a leak in the guys system outside then it's before the
meter so it wouldn't register.
I own a 2 family and there are 4 people living in it and we don't
use anything close to 600 gallons a day. Something is definetly
wrong. My bill is less then $200 a year.
Mike
|
55.128 | More water woes... | CHART::CBUSKY | | Tue Mar 20 1990 12:24 | 55 |
| - Check your current meter reading with what's on the bill, a simple
error in reading your meter could cause a huge discrepancy in your
"calculated" usage.
- Has the water dept. been estimating your bill for the prior reading
periods? If they've been estimating low, and finally get a chance to
get the "real" reading, you could be making up the difference for the
low estimates.
- Measure your "typical" usage for a day or a week and compare this to
what the bill shows.
- Has your usage REALLY gone up, or did the cost of the water go up?
- OR, could the following situation apply? It REALLY DOES for my
sister, in the fair city of Worcester Mass. What a coincidence!
My sister bought a 2 family in Worcester last year. My brother and I
were in the cellar, checking it out, and we started to trace the
plumbing lines and this is what we find. The water main enters near
the front of the house, goes thru the water meter and then runs to the
back of the house were all of the kitchens/baths are located. At the
back of the house, there's this water pipe that runs from the ceiling,
down the wall, thru a shut off valve, and goes out thru the foundation
wall about 1 foot above the floor.
"Hey, whats this for?", "Hmmm, must be the shut off for an outside
faucet." "It can't be, it goes thru the wall about 4 feet under
ground". We play with valve for a bit and then shut it off.
Next day, one of the college students living in the 3 FAMILY next door
asks my sister if she has been having any problems with her water too,
THEIR water has been OFF SINCE YESTERDAY!
GUESS where that mysterious water pipe went!!! My sister's water meter
was supplying her TWO units plus the THREE units next door.
FYI... how this came to be as far as we can figure... Orginally there
was her house, on a street corner, later the owners built a 3 family
house behind their house with frontage on the side street. When
building, they simply ran the water line from their house to the new
house. Years later, the two houses and lots were sub-divided and sold
seperately. The water meter situation still exists today, but the
landlord of the three family has agreed to pay 3/5s of my sister's
water bill until they get a new water line and meter installed.
A new line and meter sounds easy, right? Well according to the
Worcester water department, they CLAIM that the water main on the side
street where the 3 family is doesn't come up that far, which is why
they probably feed it from the house next door. The Worcester water
dept. WILL NOT install a second meter on the line that goes to the 3
family and subtract that reading from my sisters reading. The landlord
of the 3 family is still looking for a permanent solution.
Charly
|
55.129 | How to get things stratight with the city | CLOSET::DUM::T_PARMENTER | quiet, polite, dreamy child | Tue Mar 20 1990 12:34 | 1 |
| I'd get all my facts together and call my alderman.
|
55.130 | In the FLOOR ? | WJOUSM::OELFKE | The impossible takes longer | Tue Mar 20 1990 12:35 | 14 |
| A friend of mine a couple years ago had the same problem (different
town). Believe it or not ... the water company was right ! The reason
they were right is... He was on a 'slab' and his hot water heating
system ran thru the concrete floor. He found a spot in the concrete
(under the rug) that the pipe had broken! The water was running out of
the pipe and into the ground (causing a puddle in his front yard that
could now be explained...).
His floor had to be jack-hammered up ... pipe replaced ... and .,...
no more high water bill (or oil bill since the furnance kept running
too).
Bob O.
|
55.131 | re .4 | NITMOI::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Tue Mar 20 1990 13:35 | 7 |
|
> If there's a leak in the guys system outside then it's before the
> meter so it wouldn't register.
Not true. Many homes have sprinkler systems built into the ground, or faucets
out in or behind a detached garage. Just because a pipe is outside does not
make it unmetered.
|
55.132 | | NSSG::FEINSMITH | I'm the NRA | Wed Mar 21 1990 08:54 | 6 |
| As was said earlier, the easiest way to check for leaks is to shut off
any running water for an hour or so and then check the meter. If it
went up, you've probably got a leak (or other water user) elsewhere in
the system.
Eric
|
55.133 | Listen to the water. | MED::D_SMITH | | Wed Mar 21 1990 09:56 | 5 |
|
In the dead of silence, you should be able to hear the water running
thru the meter with verything turned off.
|
55.134 | | GIAMEM::RIDGE | | Wed Mar 21 1990 10:28 | 11 |
| Thanks to Mr Levy and the MWRA, my water/sewer bill now runs $225-250
per year. Billed quarterly. Single family house with two adults and two
children. When I first purchased my house , 1979 no kids, I think the
water/sewer bill was about $80-100 per year.
My neighbor once received a water bill of about $500-600. He refused to
pay. After checking that his meter was working correctly, the town,
after about a year of arguing, then advertised his house for auction
for non payment. Guess who won.
Steve Ridge
|
55.135 | Water is still dirt cheap! | TALLIS::KOCH | Kevin Koch LTN1-2/H09 DTN226-6274 | Wed Mar 21 1990 11:20 | 11 |
| > Thanks to Mr Levy and the MWRA, my water/sewer bill now runs $225-250
> per year. Billed quarterly. Single family house with two adults and two
> children. When I first purchased my house , 1979 no kids, I think the
> water/sewer bill was about $80-100 per year.
If there is a negative implication of the 'thanks to ...', may I ask
why? Your water bill has only gone up at an annualized rate of 10%/year,
and you've doubled the number of people in your household! If you tried
to compare apples to apples, instead of to oranges, you might estimate
your water bill for two to be about $150/year -- an annualized rate of
increase of 5.8%. What are you copmplaining about?
|
55.136 | I think Jordan Levy is good mayor | MFGMEM::S_JOHNSON | Say it, don't spray it! | Wed Mar 21 1990 13:20 | 5 |
| re <<< Note 3754.11 by GIAMEM::RIDGE >>>
> after about a year of arguing, then advertised his house for auction
> for non payment. Guess who won.
So, the city auctioned off the house and booted him out?
|
55.137 | Random facts | CIMNET::LEACHE | | Wed Mar 21 1990 13:47 | 13 |
| A few water factoids:
My family (6) uses about 50,000 gallons of water per year (I think this is
outrageously high).
MWRA water rates are projected to go up N *100% over the next 10 years
(Anybody remember what N is?)
If you're interested in metering some segment of your system, (or verifying
your main meter) water meters can be had for approx $50-$60. TI sales in
Maynard is one source ...
|
55.138 | Answers | GIAMEM::RIDGE | | Thu Mar 22 1990 11:16 | 9 |
| re .12 Kevin,
I should have added that the MWRA is projecting increases
in water rates in multiples of 100% over the next 10 years.
If I really wanted to compare apples to apples I would need
to compare cost per gallon not the number of people. Since
I agree that "Water is still dirt cheap" I do not feel the
gain from doing the reasearch is worth the effort.
re .13 No, he paid the bill the day before the scheduled auction.
|
55.139 | COMPARE PAST WATER BILLS! | JUPITR::MJUBINVILLE | | Wed Mar 28 1990 14:12 | 6 |
|
get your last couple of water bills and if it shows a quite bit of
difference in water then bring it to worcester....
Mike
|
55.140 | 4 x the current rate | CSDNET::DICASTRO | Jet Ski jockey | Fri Mar 30 1990 14:30 | 9 |
| If you live within the confines of the MWRA (Mass water Resources
Auth.) expect you water bill to exceed your property taxes. The folks
in this area will be helping to foot the bill of the Boston Harbor
cleanup. A politician is in the process of introducing leglislation to
let the folks who incur theese bills write them off (cause Bush pulled
the $$$$$$ for the cleanup, presumably, to slap Dukakis in the eyebrows)
According to Jerry Williams, the water bills are expexted to
quadruple..
-bd-
|
55.141 | | TALLIS::KOCH | Kevin Koch LTN1-2/H09 DTN226-6274 | Fri Mar 30 1990 14:49 | 11 |
| >I should have added that the MWRA is projecting increases in water rates in
>multiples of 100% over the next 10 years.
So now want to compare past rate of increase to future rate! (;-)
Anyway, a 100% increase in 10 years is only 7.2%/year and 200%
increase in 10 years is 11.6%.
Increases of this amount or even more will drive water conservation
far more effectively than commercials on TV advertizing free water
restrictors.
|
55.142 | WATER OR SEWER BILL | 2BIT::BURKHART | Get that out of your mouth | Fri Apr 06 1990 10:41 | 22 |
|
For those who do a lot of lawn watering and car washing you might want
to check into getting a 2nd meter put on for those outside faucets
so you don't get charged for sewage rates for water that goes into
the ground. They can also put temporary meters on if your filling
a new inground pool.
As far as estimates go. Keep a check on which bills are estimates
and which are real. In my town they're suppose to do 2 actuals and
2 estimates a year. Well last month I got my 4th estimated bill
in a row and 1 day later the water dept. sends a letter saying my
meter was not registering. Turns out I had a broken wire from
meter inside to indicator outside. They replaced the works anyways.
Now with a new meter I wonder how they'll adjust my bill to reflect
what I actually used. As near as I can tell They were bassing the
estimates on my last actual reading which was 2 summers ago when
I put in a new lawn.
...Dave
|
55.143 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Apr 06 1990 11:00 | 6 |
| re .19:
I can understand that the water used when watering your lawn or washing
your car won't go into the sewer system, but don't you drain your
swimming pool into the sewer? I confess that I don't know anything
about swimming pools -- I use next unseen for swimming pool notes.
|
55.145 | Water pressure | JUPITR::JOUBERT | | Thu Apr 19 1990 02:37 | 9 |
| I have a question. I recently moved from the third floor to the first.
My water pressure was better on the third than the first. Why is this??
I thought it would be the other way around. What could I do to improve,
my water pressure. It feels like I am taking a shower by a sprinkler!!
please send some good news.
Thanks in advance.
|
55.146 | Water saver installed? | CSC32::GORTMAKER | Only 5 more sleepless days to go! | Thu Apr 19 1990 09:41 | 5 |
| Have you removed the shower head to see if there is a flow reducer?
I regulary take them out of the shower heads in hotels so I can take a real
shower. BTW- I put it back before I check out....
-j
|
55.147 | 814, 995 | BEING::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Thu Apr 19 1990 09:58 | 18 |
| This note has been temporarily write-locked pending approval of the author.
To the author: This subject is already under discussion in this file, under the
topics listed in the title. Please look at these notes; you may find that your
question is already answered, or you may find a note where your question would
be an appropriate continuation of the discussion. Note that since nearly
everyone uses NEXT UNSEEN to read notes, your question will get the same
exposure whether it is a response to a two-year-old note or it is its own new
note. These topics were found using the keyword directory (note 1111), and you
may find other notes relating to this subject by examining the directory
yourself.
We do, however, welcome new notes if they explore a specific aspect of a
problem that may be under general discussion. And this moderator has been
known to make mistakes. :^) So if after examining these notes, you wish to
continue the discussion here, send me mail.
Paul [Moderator]
|
55.151 | How to Equalize Water Pressure b/w 1st & 2nd Floors | JUPITR::DICK | | Fri May 11 1990 14:46 | 17 |
| I am having a water pressure/flow rate to the second floor fixtures,
shower, sink, toilet, etc when the clothswasher, or dishwasher is running
on the first floor.
The water is from a well supply that maintains pressure from 30 to 50
psi. The water is filtered, goes to a 3/4" master feed line, then to 1/2"
feeds to individual fixtures or appliances. Sinks and toilets are fed
via 3/8" supply lines.
I am considering putting flow reducers on the washers so that more
water would be available to the second floor ... anybody got ideas ? I was
thinking of reducing the 1/2 " supply pipes to 3/8" as a means of
reducing flow.
|
55.152 | Open to the public | WARIOR::RAMSEY_B | Put the wet stuff on the red stuff | Mon May 14 1990 17:28 | 6 |
| At the request of the author, I have un-write locked this note. Feel
free to offer suggestions about how to equalize the pressure between
different locations in the same building. I have updated the title to
reflect this more narrowed topic of discussion.
Bruce [moderator]
|
55.153 | Billerica's new water meters. $$$$$$ | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | Men Are Pigs, And Proud Of It! | Wed Sep 26 1990 14:51 | 47 |
|
Residents of Billerica, Ma. BEWARE!! The town is in the process of
changing to new water meters. They changed mine and I got hit with a bill
for $460.00. That's 10 times larger than a normal bill. They said it's from
the actual reading taken from the meter at the time of the switch. Well,
let me tell you. This just can't be right. I called and spoke to a woman
at the water department.
Me: This is way too high. Something has to be wrong. It can't be right.
Her: Well, that was taken from a actual reading when they removed the meter.
Me: In the last town I lived in, I paid water AND sewage which totaled out
to be a 50% higher rate than here, and it took 2 1/2 years to total over
$400.oo in bills.
Her: Well, how many are in the house?
Me: 5
Her: Well, 5 people use a lot of water.
Me: There were 5 in the last house too.
PAUSE
Me: What about the last actual reading on my meeting?
She check
Her: There haven't been any.
Me: WHAT!! I've been here for 2 years and nobody has ever read the meter?
Her: No. They've all been estimates.
Me: What can you possibly be basing your estimates on?
Her: Maybe from the people that lived there before you.
Me: I BUILT THIS HOUSE!! Nobody lived here before me. The house didn't exist
before me.
PAUSE
Her: Well, you can come in and look at the meter yourself if you'd like.
By now I'm totally frustrated and have to come up with a strategy, so I said
I would later in the week.
On my way home last night, I remembered something the guy that changed the meter
said to me. He said "The reading on your meter doesn't match what's on the
remote box, so I made a note of it on the slip." I called the water department
today and told them I'd like to see that slip. I have to call them back
tomorrow.
My neighbor that works for the town said that people are getting hit with
bills as high as .....are you sitting......$2,000.00. How many YEARS have
these houses gone without actual readings!! One other point: If they always
estimate, then why are we (town taxpayers) paying over 2 million dollars for
the meter swap if they never come to read them anyway??
AAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRGGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHHHHH !!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Chris D.
|
55.154 | Read your own meter ocassionally | SNDPIT::SMITH | Smoking -> global warming! :+) | Wed Sep 26 1990 16:53 | 18 |
| It sounds like (from the reference to a 'remote box') that you have a
meter inside and a box on the outside of your house that the meter
reader person reads. Either the meter was not set to zero when they
put it in, the gears (or whatever) have been slipping and the outside
box wasn't reading properly, or something like that.
What's reasonable:
1) Water and sewage is $46 per month.
2) Water and sewage is $65 per month, but you've only been
paying $45 and now the difference has caught up with you.
I dunno water/sewage myself, but I have learned it's useful to read
ones (electric) meter occasionally to make sure the utility is 'sane'.
On the other hand, maybe they are replacing the meters because the
'remote boxes' don't read right and the town is losing revenue....
Willie
|
55.155 | | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | Men Are Pigs, And Proud Of It! | Wed Sep 26 1990 17:11 | 34 |
| >> It sounds like (from the reference to a 'remote box') that you have a
>> meter inside and a box on the outside of your house that the meter
>> reader person reads.
Yes that's right. Sorry I didn't make that clear. The meter is
inside, a remote box that the meter reader reads is outside the house.
>> Either the meter was not set to zero when they
>> put it in, the gears (or whatever) have been slipping and the outside
>> box wasn't reading properly, or something like that.
I agree. Try telling them that!!
>> 2) Water and sewage is $65 per month, but you've only been
>> paying $45 and now the difference has caught up with you.
I only have water. In the old house I had water and sewage. I could
understand a few bucks difference, but not $460!! If you add that to
what I did pay in the last 2 years, it totals over $650.00!! In 2
years!!?? Give me a break!
>> On the other hand, maybe they are replacing the meters because the
>> 'remote boxes' don't read right and the town is losing revenue....
They are changing meters and remote boxes because the new set up
doesn't have to be manually read at all. A meter reader comes to the
house with some kind of device that "plugs in" to the remote box and
instantly reads the meter and stores it in memory. I guess at the end
of the day everything is "dumped" into a computer. But, like I said,
why waste the money if they only estimate anyway!!!
Chris D.
|
55.156 | | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Wed Sep 26 1990 17:23 | 9 |
| I had a similar chat with my town (Hudson, MA) water people. They
had been estimating my bills for a year and a half because the
meter didn't work, and they hadn't told me. They didn't try to
bill me for the prior period though.
As for what's reasonable, we pay about $300/year for water and
sewer, and are reasonbaly careful about our water use.
--David
|
55.157 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Thu Sep 27 1990 10:55 | 7 |
|
Re .0:
Offer to pay the excess amount of you bill in installments, spread over
the same period as they failed to read your meter and thus encouraged
you to build up such a debt.
|
55.158 | now THERE'S a good idea. | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | Men Are Pigs, And Proud Of It! | Thu Sep 27 1990 11:24 | 3 |
| re: .4 I like it!!!
Chris D.
|
55.159 | | ULTRA::SEKURSKI | | Thu Sep 27 1990 13:40 | 11 |
|
I never realized it was that expensive......
Makes me see my well in a new light even though it needed
a filtering system....
Mike
----
|
55.160 | Mine Were All Over-Estimated | FRAGLE::ELDRIDGE | | Thu Sep 27 1990 14:07 | 20 |
| RE: .0
You mean your wern't running a car wash in your back yard either??
:>) :>)
I've lived in Billerica approx. 10 years and have only seen the
meter reader once! I've contested every bill and had all reduced and
hence was the only one in the neighborhood who did NOT recieve an
outrageous bill after installing the new meter. My bills were so over
inflated that the town would have owed me money. I couldn't believe
that everyone elses were underestimated!
With the new meters, they are "suppossed" to be read every billing
period as no one has to be home for them to be read. I will believe
that when I see it so until I'm convinced, I'll run every bill down to
the meter as soon as I recieve it and check.
Paul
they are 'suppossed' to be read every billing period as one does not
have to be home. I'll believe it when I see it.
|
55.161 | new radio meters? | CLUSTA::GLANTZ | Mike @TAY Littleton MA, 227-4299 | Thu Sep 27 1990 14:21 | 2 |
| Are these the new meters which can be read by radio from a car in the
street? If so, they probably will read them more frequently.
|
55.162 | Pitch a Fit at the Water Office | ODIXIE::RAMSEY | Take this job and Love it! | Thu Sep 27 1990 14:51 | 14 |
| Well we have both water and sewer with two living in a house. Our bill
runs around $10-$15 a month total. That's in surburan Atlanta. $460
for 3 years over what you have already paid seems completely outragous!
I know that our meter has been checked because I have seen the readers
and they have left the cover off several times after I have replaced
it.
The gas company put little radio units on the meters about a year or
two ago. Now they just drive by and read the meter. No more walking
thru the weather getting chased by dogs and stung by insects.
Technology to the rescue.
|
55.163 | | MFGMEM::S_JOHNSON | Underdog: The Movie | Thu Sep 27 1990 15:36 | 16 |
| In Gardner, MA, they send out little cards, asking the homeowner to
read the meter, write the reading on the card, and mail it back (postage
paid by the city no less).
The city doesn't have to send people out, and you get to read your own
meter, eliminating any question about a wrong reading being billed.
It's low-tech, too.
Steve
Last year, Water/Sewer combined ran about $330.00 for a 2 family, with 7
people living in the house. It's going up every year, Water is getting
to be an expensive utility.
|
55.164 | Abolish the Water Billing Dept !?! | FRAGLE::ELDRIDGE | | Thu Sep 27 1990 15:57 | 14 |
| re:.8
To read the meters, a person must insert a plastic card (much like
a credit card) which takes the readings.
RE: postage paid cards
Billerica had the same system in which the meter reader left the
card at your house if no one was home. They also had a system that
the home owner would call in the readings 3 times a year. The numbers
that I put on the cards or called in, NEVER appeared on the bills. No
one could explain why to me either. I WILL continue to check all of
my bills.
Paul
|
55.165 | More like SHOOT the water department. | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | Men Are Pigs, And Proud Of It! | Fri Sep 28 1990 10:07 | 40 |
| >> Billerica had the same system in which the meter reader left the
>> card at your house if no one was home. They also had a system that
>> the home owner would call in the readings 3 times a year.
I've never received a card. Also, I've always had a remote box
outside, so nobody had to be home. I don't have a dog to frighten him
away, I've always kept a path shoveled in the winter (I see that was a
waste of time).
>> The numbers
>> that I put on the cards or called in, NEVER appeared on the bills. No
>> one could explain why to me either. I WILL continue to check all of
>> my bills.
Could this be the old "More than one street with the same name"
problem? YOu may be getting the other person's bill. They are well
known for doing that. My neighbor has been trying to straighten them
out for 2 years now, with no success.
I talked to the water department yesterday. I had them dig up the
paper that I signed when the new meter was installed because I
remembered the installer saying something about a discrepency between
the meter and the reomte box when he removed them. Sure enough, the
meter said I've used a total of 42331 cubic feet and the box said
37950. When I said the box sounds a little better, they naturally said
that the meter gives a more accurate reading. Of course, that's what I
expected to hear. I told here there's no way I can pay in the 30 days
allowed. She said to call the Selectmans office. These people were
very nice. She gave me a name of someone to write a letter to,
explaining the situation, and voice my complaints. The selectman's
office will review these and decide what to do. The women I spoke with
said they've had MANY complaints. When I asked "Well, what could come
of the selectman's office reviewing them", she said that they may
contact each person to work out a payment plan, or maybe come up with
some type of universal payment plan, or, are you ready for this, the
town may swallow the bills!!! So, if you know anyone in Billerica that
has this problem, have them write to Evelyn Haines at the selectman's
office in the town hall. The more the merrier!!
Chris D.
|
55.166 | exit | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | Men Are Pigs, And Proud Of It! | Fri Sep 28 1990 15:01 | 7 |
| The correct place to send to, for those interested, is:
Evelyn Haines
Assistant Town Administrator
Billerica Town Hall
365 Boston Rd.
Billerica, Ma.
|
55.167 | Can you believe it gets worse??!! | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | Men Are Pigs, And Proud Of It! | Fri Sep 28 1990 21:34 | 23 |
| Holly cow!! This get's worse by the day. Listen to the first 3
paragraphs from tonight's paper regarding the water bills.
Quoted from the Lowell Sun:
BILLERICA - Residents unable to pay the close-out bill on their old
water meter because of financial hardship may be able to makeartial
payments under a formal agreement with the town, officials said this
week.
Town Administrator Paul Talbot said he may offer a payment plan to
water customers who received unusually high water bills when the Water
Department closed out accounts on old water meters.
{Here comes the good part}
A 14 percent INTEREST CHARGE will be applied to the unpaid
balance.
INTEREST CHARGE!!! I say F*** YOU!!!!
If they insist on this, I'll do everything I can to fight it, maybe
even get citizens together under a class action suit.
THis is really p*ssing me off!!
Chris D.
|
55.168 | boo hiss...but typical billerica! | IAMOK::ALFORD | I'd rather be fishing | Mon Oct 01 1990 11:58 | 18 |
|
hmmm.
guess i'll have to pay more attention to my water bills.
I too live in Billerica, and have noticed the price going
up, but not in the $$$ amounts mentioned here. (more like
from $60 for 3 months to $90 for 3 months...)....
so, looks like i'll have to pay closer attention!!
However, I did used to get cards which I sent in, but honestly
I never checked the next bill to see how close they were!
silly me!! :-( :-(
if i get the kind of bills you fellows have gotten, you can
be sure ms. haines will be getting a complaint from me too!!
debbie
|
55.169 | Paying interest is perfectly fair.\ | TALLIS::KOCH | DTN226-6274 ... If you don't look good, DEC doesn't look good. | Mon Oct 01 1990 12:01 | 33 |
| > BILLERICA - Residents unable to pay the close-out bill on their old
> water meter because of financial hardship may be able to makeartial
> payments under a formal agreement with the town, officials said this
> week.
> Town Administrator Paul Talbot said he may offer a payment plan to
> water customers who received unusually high water bills when the Water
> Department closed out accounts on old water meters.
> {Here comes the good part}
> A 14 percent INTEREST CHARGE will be applied to the unpaid
> balance.
>
>
> INTEREST CHARGE!!! I say F*** YOU!!!!
> If they insist on this, I'll do everything I can to fight it, maybe
> even get citizens together under a class action suit.
I really don't think you need to do anything so drastic. There is a
consumer law that says that if at the end of X months, a utility has
undercharged you, you have another X months to get your outstanding
balance down to zero. Once the electric company took over a year to find
out who to send the bill to for an income property I had bought. I had a
year to pay off the balance. Maybe somebody else knws exactly what the
law is. Also, I don't know whether the utilty can charge interest.
[Boston Edison didn't.]
On the other hand, if you really owe the utility money, you have
effectively been collecting interest from them on the unpaid balance, so
to be fair, you should pay them back interest on your outstanding
balance. So maybe you shouldn't complain about interest charges.
After all, you live in the town, and are going to pay whatever amount
of money the town needs, one way or another. Suing them is just going to
raise the town's costs, which will be passed on to you.
|
55.170 | Who knows where that money went. | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | Men Are Pigs, And Proud Of It! | Mon Oct 01 1990 12:17 | 10 |
| >> Suing them is just going to
>> raise the town's costs, which will be passed on to you.
I wouldn't intend on suing for money. I would sue to stop the
interest charge.
I just called the selectman's office to find out about tonight's
meeting agenda and there is NOTHING on it about the water bills or
meters. I thought that would be in there somewhere!!??
Chris D.
|
55.171 | From when to now | CSDNET::DICASTRO | Global Re-leaf! | Mon Oct 01 1990 13:19 | 12 |
| For you folks in Billerica who are getting the huge bills. The first
question that comes to mind is how long did you own the property, and
did you "zero" the water account at the purchase and sale ? In other
words the innacurate estimates may be culminative from 10 years, and
you have only owned the property for 3 yrs. When we purchased our
property, $$ was left in an account to pay the portion of the water
bill owed by the previous owner. Our billing is quarterly, and based
on homeowners reading the meter.
FYI, properties in the MWRA districts (Boston), have water and sewer
bills which are supposed to exceed their property taxes in the near
future.
|
55.172 | More stuff to do on closing day... | SALEM::LAYTON | | Mon Oct 01 1990 14:24 | 13 |
| I thought the general practice was to have the water, elec, and fuel
tank measured or read on the closing day to avoid just this.
Chris is angry not because the charges accrued over X years, but
because the town started his new meter at 0, instead of what ever
random number happened to be on it. This is the number written on the
slip by the installer of the new meter.
HE NEVER GOT TO USE THE WATER HE WAS BILLED FOR!
Did I get this right, Chris?
Carl
|
55.173 | They could try charging you for your private well | MARX::FLEURY | | Mon Oct 01 1990 16:27 | 27 |
|
I can tell you why it's costing so much money - because they are
spending alot of time trying to install meters on houses that have
private wells. Approximately once a week for the last couple months
somebody has called to make an appointment to install a new water
meter in our house. Each time we have told them that we are not on
town water.
Last month when my mother was here for a week, they asked HER if
they could install a meter. Not realizing we had a private well,
she made an appointment for the next day. After we explained the
situation to her she agreed to handle the technician when he arrived
the next day. When he came to the house, she asked him if he could
hook us up to town water first. He didn't think it was funny.
The next week, they called AGAIN, asking to install the meter. I
explained that we had our own well. We talked for a while about why
they were having so much difficulty understanding the fact that we
had a private well. It seems that they were really trying to install
a meter at Clinton Langley's house. You see, Clinton lives at
9 Sprucewood Rd (we live at 9 Sprucewood Ave). In the end, the caller
decided to cross Clinton Langley's name off the list because it was to
much trouble to resolve the issue correctly.
We haven't heard from them since. And to this day, neither Clinton
Langley's house nor our house has a new water meter.
|
55.174 | re: .19 | SNDPIT::SMITH | Smoking -> global warming! :+) | Mon Oct 01 1990 16:30 | 22 |
| I suspect what happened to Chris is that he was using water which was
counted on the 'real' part of his water meter, but _not_ counted on the
'virtual' part (the repeater on the outside of his house). Since the
'virtual' meter never showed this water, he wasn't charged for it, but
the town finally caught up to him and now they want their money. If
the water rates have gome up in the last couple of years, he shouldn't
have to pay all of that water at today's rates, but that's probably
hard to explain to the water department.
I had a similar 'problem' with the power company in Waltham. They
never read my meter, never billed me, and never contacted me till the
day (a year after I moved in) the guy came by to nail the 'final notice
of disconnection' to my door. [As an aside, I had electric heat and I
don't think they were allowed to disconnect me, but they were allowed
to threaten it.] Fortunately for me, I had been reading the electric
meter every month, writing them a check for 10 cents/HWHR, and stuffing
it into a drawer. I gave them the appropriate hard time about not
having billed me and why should I have to pay this, and got them
started on a payment plan, then I caved in and sent them the old
checks. But you gotta keep an eye on these people!
Willie
|
55.175 | 2 main issues here. | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | Men Are Pigs, And Proud Of It! | Mon Oct 01 1990 20:34 | 18 |
| No no no!! YOu guys got it wrong. THere are two issues here. The
first is that the town NEVER read my meter NOR the remote unit. THe
second issue is that the meter and remote unit don't match. I don't
argue that I owe them something, but if they can't prove there's
anything wrong with the remote unit, then I say that's the right one.
I don't have the slightest idea why the remote and the meter don't
match. If they had an independent componey test the meter ahd remote
and it came back that the remote was defective, I wouldn't argue.
Chris D.
p.s Well, I guess you could call the 14% interest charge a third issue
now. In about 15 minutes, I'm leaving for the selectmen's meeting to
see if this gets brought up. My cousin, who works in another town
gevernment system, said that just because the issue is not on the
agenda doesn't mean it won't get discussed, especially if a lot of
angree citizens arrive. GGGGGGGGGRRRRRRRRRRRR!!!!!!!!!!!! Is that
angree enough? :^)
|
55.176 | You can sechedule it yourself | HKFINN::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Tue Oct 02 1990 11:14 | 4 |
| You should be able to call the town clerk and get the issue on
the agenda for a selectman's meeting. Then you (and 5,000
other people? :-) ) could go and state your case.
|
55.177 | Maybe that wasn't the one to go to. | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | Men Are Pigs, And Proud Of It! | Tue Oct 02 1990 13:46 | 6 |
| There was nothing at the Selectman's meeting last night. However, one
of them told me in the hall that at tonight's town meeting, it will
probably be brought up. He's expecting lots of people like me to show
up.
Chris D.
|
55.178 | Which bank give 14% for my money?? | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Wed Oct 03 1990 18:33 | 21 |
| Minus a few ..... someone said that you SHOULD pay interest on the
money owed, since in effect Billerica residents had collected interest
on the money they didn't have to pay. Now, I'm not into investing and
squeezing every cent out of every last dollar, but the last time I
checked, about all the interest that I could get on a few hundred
dollars was about 5%. And the last time I checked there was a big
difference between 5% and 14% ... but maybe it's this new math.
Chris .... I would suggest keeping a file with every action that you've
made, dates, times, conversations and who you talked to. Sooner or
later someone's going to say 'Well, who told you that?', and you're not
going to remember and they'll REALLY start ignoring you.
GOOD LUCK!! And boy am I GLAD I don't live in Billerica!!
RE: Clinton .... If I was Clinton, I'd make sure that no one tried to
read my meter when I moved (of course by then they might not be ABLE to
read those old-fashioned meters (-;) ... could you imagine ignoring
someone cuz their street address happened to be similar to someone
elses????? It amazes me that anything ever gets done ....
|
55.179 | Ah yes but | NOEDGE::REITH | Jim Reith DTN 291-0072 - PDM1-1/J9 | Thu Oct 04 1990 08:55 | 2 |
| This is money that you don't need to take out a 14% personal loan to have
access to ;^)
|
55.180 | | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | Men Are Pigs, And Proud Of It! | Thu Oct 04 1990 09:59 | 23 |
| >> checked, about all the interest that I could get on a few hundred
>> dollars was about 5%. And the last time I checked there was a big
>> difference between 5% and 14% ... but maybe it's this new math.
Yeah, I think I mentioned that a few back too.
>> Chris .... I would suggest keeping a file with every action that you've
>> made, dates, times, conversations and who you talked to. Sooner or
I send myself mail and keep it in a mail folder. I've always done
this, but thanks for that advice. Someone else may read this and learn
from it.
>> GOOD LUCK!! And boy am I GLAD I don't live in Billerica!!
Well, I moved from Lowell, so I am better off.
>> RE: Clinton .... If I was Clinton, I'd make sure that no one tried to
If I lived in Clinton, I wouldn't tell anybody. :^)
Chris D.
|
55.181 | same boat | NETDOC::VASSIL | | Fri Oct 12 1990 14:35 | 13 |
| Any update on this note?
I'm trying to help my mom with the same situation. She has lived in
the house for almost 20 years, so you can image what her "Catch-up"
bill was.
I too called the water dept. and was told to call the town hall who
told me to write a letter to Mr. Talbot, town administrator. Boy, did
I write him a letter!
How can the town of Billerica expect residents to pay the outragous
"Catch-up" bills and be penalized with interest on top of it! The
nerve!
|
55.182 | Thanks for the reminder | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | Men Are Pigs, And Proud Of It! | Mon Oct 15 1990 15:51 | 12 |
| Reading your last reply reminded me to call them. I sent my letter
2 weeks ago, so I figured it's about time for the follow-up call.
I was told by the selectman's office that they will review all the
letters and respond by mail or phone about a payment schedule.
Well, I have more than just a payment schedule to worry about. I have
2 different readings from the meter and the remote box. The person
in charge of this is a guy by the name of Richard Bento (I don't know
if that's how you spell his last name, but that's how you say it,
bent-o). I called him (671-0955) and he was out of the office for the
rest of the day, so I'll try him tomorrow.
Chris D.
|
55.183 | City Sewer bill screw up... | SMURF::PINARD | | Mon Oct 22 1990 17:04 | 33 |
| If the water meter reads more than the remote box, the remote box
may have been added later. This probably has been mentioned, what I
really want to say is what happened to me...
3 years ago Goffstown N.H. started charging a sewer bill so they can
connect to manchester sewer plant instead of going direct into the
river(s)...
Well I got 2 bills for my Duplex, one at 53, and one at 55 Pershing St.
I call them up and ask Why I got 2 bills and they say because it's
2 units each are charged... (That was 3 years ago) SOme where along
the line I asked someone else who had a duplex and they were only
getting one bill, and I called and asked again, and got the same story.
I know I stated the amount but they didn't catch it.
Well my quarterly bill came in Sept. and I only got one. Course for
the past year the numbers on the houses changed from 53-55 to 64A-B.
The sewer dept was just correcting and checking up on units/house
and one of the bills I was getting was actually my neighbors.
He just started getting billed in September... Sewer dept figured
I just sold the property to this other person... wrong...
When I only recieved one bill I called and asked what the sewer
bills were again and they said each unit is build. And I said $100
per unit and they said no $50. and I said I was getting 2 bills for
$100 and gave the 2 account numbers, and thats when she figured out
I was paying the neighbors account number with my name and address
on the bill for 3 years. Well They sent me a check plus interest,
I had all my bills and check reciepts to prove it...
I asked if my neighbor was going to have to come up with $1200,
she said she didn't know, because it was their fault, and the
board would have to decide... I'll have to ask Ron next time I see
him, if they are trying to charge him for the past 3 year sewer
bills... Glad I got my money and interest...
Jean
|
55.184 | | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | Men Are Pigs, And Proud Of It! | Sat Dec 29 1990 19:06 | 7 |
| Well, after all this time my water meter problems with the town still
haven't been settled yet, but now, here's something interesting. I
just got a water bill for the last 3/4 months, and guess what!! There
is now noplace on the bill that states if it was an estimate or actual
reading. How low can you go??!!
Chris D>
|
55.277 | How to Verifiy Leak in Underground Supply Line? | SUBWAY::RATHKEY | | Thu Jan 24 1991 16:13 | 14 |
| I have been told by a plumber that the waterpipe from the street to
the house has a leak. There is no visual evidence of this, such as
puddles forming on the front lawn etc. The plumber turned off the
water supply to the house and listened to the pipe at the point that
it enters the basement. As he could hear the motion of water through
the pipe when no water is entering the internal system in the house he
claims that I must have a leak. Does anyone know of a way to verify
this? In addition to the expense of ripping up half the front yard I
am concerned that damage will occur to the foundation of the house,
especially if the leak is close to the house,
Thanks,
David.
|
55.278 | Read your meter | ODIXIE::RAMSEY | EMT's Save Lives | Thu Jan 24 1991 17:00 | 6 |
|
My house has a main shutoff inside the house as well as one at the
street. You could shutoff the one just inside the house and leave the
street turned on. Check the meter before you go to bed and again the
following morning. If a change in the numbers, you have a leak
outside. If no change in the meter, no leak that night.
|
55.279 | Meter? Call the Water Dept | VIA::SUNG | Live Free or Live in MA | Thu Jan 24 1991 22:34 | 13 |
| RE: .1
The inside shutoff valve is before the water meter. If you shut it
off, why would you expect the meter to change if water is leaking
outside under the front lawn?
RE: .0
You could call the town water department to have them check it out
for free nonetheless. There is some sort of listening
device to detect underground leaks in water mains.
-al
|
55.280 | you'll know it's broke when it's *really* broke | LEZAH::QUIRIY | Espresso mornings, lasagna nights | Thu Jan 24 1991 22:41 | 25 |
|
I guess I don't understand what damage can occur to the foundation of
the house. Could if possibly crack?
Anyway, I lived in a house where this happened. It took a long time to
figure out what the problem was. The first thing we noticed was that
our water pressure seemed low. We called the town water people to come
out to the house. They came by at least twice and scratched their
chins and pulled at their ears and walked out to the street and looked
at the ground and then decided the meter was somehow defective and
took it out of the line. They went away and we never heard from them
again. No improvement, but it seemed to stabilize and wasn't bad enough
to _bother_ us enough to pursue it. Then it got worse. Taking a
shower was like standing under a drip. Then, one day, as I went to get
into my car, I realized that the ground was very muddy just at the edge
of the driveway, where I had to step to get into my car. This also
happened to be late winter/early spring and the ground was just
beginning to thaw. Called the water department. Broken pipe, no
mistake about it. It was about 4 feet from where the pipe went under
the house (or through the cement under the garage).
I guess my feeling is, if it's a broken pipe, you'll find concrete
evidence of it sooner or later.
CQ
|
55.281 | Apples and Oranges | ODIXIE::RAMSEY | EMT's Save Lives | Fri Jan 25 1991 10:20 | 15 |
| .2
I re-read my reply and maybe we are talking about differnt shutoff
valves. The water dept. provides a shutoff valve before the meter to
allow the water dept. to shut off the water. A pipe leads from the
meter to the house. Once the pipe enters the house, there is usually
another shutoff valve installed by the plumber. This is the valve I
was alluding to. If the valve *inside* the house is shutoff and the
valve at the meter is turned on, then the only place that is being
supplied with water is the pipe in the front lawn. If the meter
changes, there is a leak in that pipe. If no meter change, the leak is
inside the house somewhere.
Are we talking apples to apples?
|
55.282 | I be confused... | DCSVAX::COTE | I've got an alibi... | Fri Jan 25 1991 10:44 | 4 |
| Can someone explain to me how a meter placed *after* a leaky pipe
will detect the leak? Doesn't the meter measure water going thru it?
Edd
|
55.283 | Different locations? | STAR::DZIEDZIC | | Fri Jan 25 1991 10:58 | 11 |
| Sounds like .4 has a meter in a "non-standard" place. In all the
cases I've seen, the city has a shutoff valve outside the house
where your water feed connects to the main. The pipe from this
valve enters the house where it connects to another shutoff valve.
The meter is AFTER this shutoff valve so the meter can be replaced
without having to get to the "outside" (street) shutoff.
If the street valve is shut off in this case, no water will flow
to the meter inside the house.
Is .5's meter outside the house?
|
55.284 | Is yours an inny or an outy? | ODIXIE::RAMSEY | EMT's Save Lives | Fri Jan 25 1991 11:26 | 13 |
| Water meters are always outside the house. True or false?
If water meters are inside the house, how does the water department get
to the meter to read the meter to send you a bill? In my area, all
water meters are outside the house, about 10-15 feet from the street in
a small metal housing in the ground in the front lawn. In the same
houseing is the shutoff valve provided by the water dept.
It seems that from some of the previous replies that what is "standard"
in one location differs from other standards. My replies assume that
the "standard" location is the meter is outside the house. Does that
make my replies make more sense?
|
55.285 | | KAHALA::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Fri Jan 25 1991 11:55 | 5 |
| Here in New England, the water meter is inside the house. The meter is not
"read" by anyone. In Chelmsford, a card is mailed out and I fill out the reading.
I am then billed based on this.
Ed..
|
55.286 | Meters are inside | CADSE::ENGELHARDT | Reality is just a simulation on God's computer. | Fri Jan 25 1991 11:56 | 9 |
| > Water meters are always outside the house. True or false?
I have NEVER seen a water meter outside the house. In my experience in the
Boston suburbs, the water meter is always in the basement, after a shutoff
valve.
Some meters have remote-reads on the outside of the house. Some are read only
by access to the cellar.
|
55.287 | ALl inclusive statements are often wrong | CSS::DCOX | | Fri Jan 25 1991 12:27 | 9 |
| re .8
Then again, in THIS part of New England, the "meter" is inside the
house and the "reader receptacle" is on the outside of the house. The
Meter reader comes by, plugs into the receptacle and gets a reading.
No meter indication is available otherwise.
Dave
|
55.288 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Jan 25 1991 12:31 | 3 |
| Hey, where are all the rocket scientists? I surmise that in the south,
water meters are outside the house because it's easier to read them there.
In the north, they're inside the house so they don't freeze.
|
55.289 | We have an inny! | RUTLND::MCMAHON | If we can't fix it, it isn't broken | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:05 | 5 |
| In Haverhill, MA, the meters are in the house. The Water Meter Readers
come by every six months to read the meters. If you're not home, they
send you a card which you fill out and send back.
|
55.290 | AH ! the light shines...Click | AUNTB::SIMON | | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:40 | 11 |
| re.11...absolutely correct !...in the south and various other "mild"
climes...the meter is outside in the yard and there is another shutoff
put in the line after the meter and before the house feed. So in
essence the troubleshooting would indeed work in this case. I guess
they just don't feel those of us in milder climes have the necessary
ability to read a meter.. ;^)...Also I might point out that the water
company considers the run from the meter to the house the
responsibility of the homeowner and will charge you if the problem is
on "your" side of the
meter....
|
55.291 | Varibles won't, Standards are not. | ODIXIE::RAMSEY | EMT's Save Lives | Fri Jan 25 1991 13:53 | 8 |
| Ok. For all you people with the meter in the wrong place ;^), then
you will have to dig up your yard to find a leak. For all of us with
the meter in the bright and sensible place :^), then troubleshooting
leaks in the pipe from the street into the the house is real easy.
Why not try hiring someone who divines for water and see if he can find
your leak. If he cannot, then you don't have one. If he does, then
you will have to dig up your yard to fix it.
|
55.292 | best watered lawn in the neighborhood | SENIOR::HAMBURGER | Whittlers chip away at life | Fri Jan 25 1991 14:36 | 21 |
| > you will have to dig up your yard to find a leak. For all of us with
Bruce, I have my meter in the wrong place, had a leak outside the
house, and had *NO* problem finding the leak. It was a wet spot on the
early spring lawn last year for a week. By early one Sunday morning, it was
a small spring rising to the surface with about a 3" high "bubbler effect"
to it......and that was from a pipe 8' undergrown! (Do you know how much
water was in the ground? Can you believe a definate runoff was found downhill
50' away on the sidewalk!) The town had to dig up my driveway to get at the
shutoff because it broke when they tried to shut my water off, so I had two
holes to fix, one at the street/driveway, one in the yard! The town fixed
my driveway no problem....the other was just about $1,000 for repairs.
Seems the original water pipe made a good pathway to follow into the house
when they added sewers years ago. Digging for the sewer cut the water line
which they repaired at that time and it was that repair that failed us. Of
course, digging for for water line, guess what sewer line they broke thru
and had to repair..... 8^(
Vic
|
55.293 | | IMTDEV::BRUNO | Nuthin' compares 2 U | Sun Jan 27 1991 12:19 | 14 |
| Having been a meter-reader for the City of Colorado Springs back
in the summer before my senior year of high school, I know that we have
indoor water meters AND outdoor remotes. We read the digital remotes
(not LEDs or LCDs, but rolling digits like odometers) each month for bills,
and checked the indoor meters every six months to verify that the remote
was working.
I also recall that there were often covered "pits" with additional
meters near the branch from the water main or in a manhole where problems
with the other meters could be checked. If this is true in the case of
the person with the leak, it could be checked easily before visible
puddles show up.
Greg
|
55.294 | Getting back to the subject | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Thu Feb 28 1991 12:30 | 19 |
| Go to your HW store and buy a water pressure meter -- I got one at spags
for a few bucks that attaches to a standard threaded outlet, e.g. in place
of a garden hose, although I have threaded outlets conveniently placed in
my basement.
Attach the thing, open the valve to the threaded outlet, and read what
your normal water pressure is. Now shut off the water at the street and
wait. If the pressure gradually drops to near zero, you've got a leak
somewhere in your plumbing.
Note that the reverse method, if you have threaded outlets in the right
places, can be used to find a *blockage* in a pipe (e.g. iron scale).
Connect the pressure meter, check what it says, then *turn on* the water
somewhere downstream. If there is a blockage in the pipe, the pressure
will either stay high or drop very low, depending which side the meter is
on.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
55.189 | Putting a 3/4" water filter on a 1 1/4" line | MPGS::QUISTG | | Wed Jun 05 1991 13:46 | 24 |
| I have just purchased an omni brand whole house water filter..
the unit will adapt to either 1/2 or 3/4 inch tubing. My main line
mesures out to 1 1/4 inch... runs that size from the meter to a
T then branching 3/4 inch two ways. One way to the furnace/water
heater feed, the other supplies house cold water..
my question:
1. is it ok to size down to 3/4 to allow filter instal
the line would go 1 1/4 to 3/4 to filter to 3/4 to 1 1/4.
2. should i have two filters..one on each 3/4 line ?
3. get a filter for larger size pipe ? ( does one exist?)
I think scenario 1. should work ...it ends as that T anyway..?
your thought,
thanks..George Quist
feel free to reply direct..(
melody::quistg )
|
55.190 | Loss of Pressure and Flow by down-sizing | ZENDIA::CHASE | Bruce Chase, Suffering thru MASS hysteria | Wed Jun 05 1991 14:40 | 8 |
| I would not recommend installing any reduction below 1" because
you will be placing too large a restriction in your feed line.
The net result will be less flow and under heavy loads (flushing
a toilet, filling a washer, watering a lawn) a significant
reduction in pressure.
Bruce
|
55.191 | | EVMS::PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Wed Jun 05 1991 14:52 | 22 |
| But it doesn't just "end at that T". It splits into two lines at that T. A
3/4" line has a much smaller flow than 1 1/4. Assuming those measurements are
inside diameter (they are probably outside diameter, which would make the
comparison even more disparate) a 3/4" line has a cross section of pi*r�, or
pi*(3/8)�=.44 in�. A 1 1/4" pipe has a cross section of pi*(5/8)�=1.23 in�, or
nearly three times the cross section of the 3/4" pipe.
You currently have one 3/4" pipe supplying your cold water, and one 3/4" pipe
supplying your hot water. With that filter in the main line, you will
effectively have one 3/4" pipe supplying your whole house, which may decrease
the flow significantly if you have both hot and cold water running at the same
time.
That said, nothing particularly horrible will happen if you do this. Most
single faucet lines are 1/2" anyway (.2 in� cross section), so you'll notice no
difference with one faucet running hot and cold at full flow. You may notice
a pressure drop if you open several faucets at the same time. For example you
may notice a more significant drop in pressure in the shower if someone turns on
another faucet or flushes a toilet. You decide whether that is worth buying
another filter and installing one in each line.
Paul
|
55.192 | shrink and stay shrunk | BTOVT::CACCIA_S | the REAL steve | Wed Jun 05 1991 16:04 | 13 |
|
The best solution would be two filters, one for each of your 3/4"
lines.
If you insist on using one filter go with the 1 1/4" to 3/4" to filter
then on the output side of the filter leave it 3/4". If you go from big
to small to big you will have a reduction in volume of water flow.
Going from small to big to small gives you a reduction in pressure.
|
55.193 | huh? | ELWOOD::LANE | | Wed Jun 05 1991 16:37 | 5 |
| >If you go from big to small to big you will have a reduction in volume of
>water flow. Going from small to big to small gives you a reduction in
>pressure.
Could you elaborate?
|
55.194 | 1" line filters | ZENDIA::CHASE | Bruce Chase, Suffering thru MASS hysteria | Thu Jun 06 1991 12:53 | 4 |
| Last time I checked Somerville Lumber had filters with 1" in and out.
Bruce
|
55.195 | do you really want to filter hot water? | TALLIS::COHEN | | Thu Jun 06 1991 13:11 | 10 |
| Unless there is something wrong with the water, that even hot water is
in need of filtration, why dont you simply install the filter in the
cold water circuit somewhere after the water feeds the heater.
You might look at the plumbing and see if by chance there is a "common"
cold water feed to your kitchen and bathroom(s) and install it in that
line. The benefit would be reducing filter load by 50%, and probably
extending it's longevity significantly.
Ron
|
55.196 | oops | BTOVT::CACCIA_S | the REAL steve | Fri Jun 07 1991 12:57 | 12 |
|
re .4 HUH?
Sorry - dislexia of the fingers or I got carried away (or got
stupid;*)).
Volume is volume. no matter what size pipe you go from or to you will
get the same amount of water, but, if you go from a small pipe to a big
one you will lose pressure. (You have to fill up the extra space before
the water can go on) check some one else's math but once the pressue is
lost it wont come back without some kind of assistance.
|
55.197 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Fri Jun 07 1991 14:06 | 10 |
| Here's another opinion:
You won't lose volume, and you won't lose pressure; what you will
lose is flow rate. If you are thinking of "volume" as "flow rate",
that's what you'll lose with the reduction.
It would help to increase the size of the pipe back up after the
filter, because the larger pipe will have less internal friction
at the boundary layer between water and pipe in relation to the total
amount of water going through the pipe.
Otherwise I dont't think it matters.
|
55.198 | SOLUTION...THANKS ALL | MPGS::QUISTG | | Fri Jun 07 1991 15:36 | 6 |
| THANKS FOR ALL YOUR SUGGESTIONS... HAVE GONE OFF TO FIND THE PROPER
DEVICE FOR THE 1 1/4" LINE...A NEIGHBOR HAS A NICE SETUP I WILL COPY.
THNKS
GEORGE QUIST
|
55.199 | | KAHALA::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Mon Jun 10 1991 13:43 | 5 |
| No one has answered the suggestion of just putting the filter on the cold water
side of the split. This seemed to me to be the best suggestion. Why would he
not want to do this?
Ed..
|
55.200 | keep debris out of furnace/water heater too | CPDW::PALUSES | | Mon Jun 10 1991 14:32 | 9 |
|
I personally like to filter ALL water coming into my house. Water
heaters, furnaces, washing machines and faucets all seem to run
'cleaner'. Of course it probably depends on how unclean your water
is to begin with.
Bob
|
55.201 | Both.... | WMOIS::VAINE | The Silver Bullet | Mon Jun 10 1991 14:58 | 9 |
| We have quite a problem with our water, high iron and turbidity, so we
want to make sure all that crud doesn't get in the hw heater,
dishwasher, washing machine, and so forth. However, all the outside
faucets are ahead of the filter/softener system. That seems to improve
a bit on pressure for lawn watering, etc. It also saves on the filters
since the water as is won't hurt the grass.
Lynn
|
55.185 | Comments since the New Meters?? | FRAGLE::ELDRIDGE | Al Bundy=Role Model Extraordinaire | Tue Jun 11 1991 09:12 | 11 |
|
Well, it has been over 9 months since this was started. The new
*easy access* meters have been installed and I'm curious how other
Billericans are faring???
My 1st bill under the new system was almost 'right on'
but the 2nd was way low.....this is the 1st LOW bill I've had in
10 years in Billerica BUT both bills have been estimates....still
have yet to see the meter reader...what a waste of money these new
meters have been!!!
Any one else ????? Paul E.
|
55.202 | | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-04/S23 -- dtn 381-2684 | Tue Jun 11 1991 17:07 | 19 |
| > Unless there is something wrong with the water, that even hot water is
> in need of filtration, why dont you simply install the filter in the
> cold water circuit somewhere after the water feeds the heater.
Onl the other hand, if there is nothing wrong with the water, then
why filter at all???
Seriously... There are [at least] two possible reasons for
filtering: (a) taste, and (b) clarity. In the case of (a) the
above suggestion is just fine, with the possible exception that
you may not want to use hot water in cooking. However, if (b) is
the problem you want to filter all the water so that you don't end
up ruining your water heater, cloths and dish washers, sinks, tubs
and toilets with stains and sediment. Feeding dirty water into a
hot water heater can render it useless in a fraction of its normal
life span. Sediment in cloth and diswashers will end up staining
clothing and dishes. Stains in sinks, tubs and toilets are just
about impossible to remove and make for a really crumby looking
bathroom. (Never looks like you cleaned it.)
|
55.186 | not too bad | CTHQ3::ALFORD | A day late, and a $ short | Fri Jun 14 1991 08:36 | 9 |
|
Well, as best as i can tell, mine have been a bit under the
past couple of times. But close enough to believe they indeed
'read' something at some point in time during the months.
I'll try to check more closely next time.
deb
|
55.187 | | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | YouGotTheRightOneBabyAhaAha! | Mon Jun 17 1991 13:30 | 11 |
| I haven't received a second bill yet. The first was very close. I
forgot how to tell on the bill if it's an actual or estimate. I'll
have to look at the next bill to remind myself. THey used to just say
the words actual or estimate, but they don't anymore.
I haven't paid my $400+ that I owe from the conversion. Too many
medical bills to catch up on right now. When that stuff settles down,
then I'll know what I have available.
There is a Chelmsford resident that owns rental property in Billerica.
Her bill is $14,000+ !!!!!!!
Chris D.
|
55.188 | Check & Request 'proper' Bills | FRAGLE::ELDRIDGE | Al Bundy=Role Model Extraordinaire | Tue Jun 18 1991 08:59 | 8 |
|
Check those bill closely! I called the Water Dept. to get a
"proper" bill. The clerk was pissed at my usage of 'proper' vs.
updated bill. When she asked why, I said, " I want to pay current
rates for current usage and not have to worry about a $14K bill later."
She had heard that alot yesterday....the article made quite an impact
in town....
Paul E.
|
55.203 | The filter restricts flow more than the pipe does | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Fri Jun 21 1991 16:13 | 14 |
| It's true that the flow rate is reduced by using a 3/4 line instead of a
1 1/4 line. However, those who recommended that the base noter get a
filter with a bigger input pipe are forgetting two points:
1) It is quite common to have the main line to a house be 3/4, before it
splits. According to a plumber I respect, with normal input pressure,
3/4 provides plenty of flow for normal household use.
2) The above point is moot anyway, because the water FILTER provides a
restriction to water flow that is going to absolutely blow away the
restriction provided by using a 3/4 pipe instead of a 1 1/4 pipe.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
55.204 | Average per person domestic water useage? | SSAG::SUSSWEIN | Ski for real, with a free heel | Tue Oct 15 1991 18:28 | 9 |
| Anybody know what the average per person domestic water useage is (not
including watering a lawn, etc.)? I just bought a house and am
considering installing low flow taps, etc., but want to see how my
useage stacks up to the average before I make the investment.
Thanks,
Steve
|
55.205 | One data point | SSDEVO::JACKSON | Jim Jackson | Tue Oct 15 1991 19:41 | 8 |
| My water bill for April, May, June was ~500 gal/day
July, August, September was ~720 gal/day (with a new lawn).
My household consists of my wife, and three children 5 and under.
This matches with my recollection of ~100 gal/day/person, plus watering.
-JJ
|
55.206 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Wed Oct 16 1991 08:49 | 7 |
| Economics aside, I'd buy the low-flow showerheads anyway; I prefer
the shower they give. And don't forget that in addition to saving
water, they save HOT water (and therefore save on hot water heating
costs).
I've never seen anything even remotely suggesting that low-flow
aerators and shower heads weren't an economic win in virtually
any situation.
|
55.207 | | SSAG::SUSSWEIN | Ski for real, with a free heel | Wed Oct 16 1991 12:46 | 2 |
| Anybody know the conversion factor from gallons to cf (cubic feet)?
|
55.208 | conv | LEDS::HAMBLEN | QUALITY doesn't cost. It PAYS! | Wed Oct 16 1991 12:57 | 5 |
| <<< Note 4407.3 by SSAG::SUSSWEIN "Ski for real, with a free heel" >>>
Anybody know the conversion factor from gallons to cf (cubic feet)?
One gallon = 0.13368 cu. ft.
|
55.209 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Wed Oct 16 1991 13:23 | 2 |
| ...or 6.8 gallons/cubic foot, more or less.
|
55.210 | They don't match | SSDEVO::JACKSON | Jim Jackson | Wed Oct 16 1991 14:18 | 7 |
| Re: .4, .5
These numbers don't match. 0.13368 ft�/gal = 7.48 gal/ft�, which isn't
close to 6.8 gal/ft�.
I figured it out once by converting to metric and back, and came up with
about 7.5 gal/ft�, which is about what reply .4 said.
|
55.211 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:11 | 3 |
| ...yep. I dragged in the wrong conversion factor from somewhere.
(Now what is 6.8 x something else....??? sigh....)
|
55.212 | 110 gals/day/bedroom | KEYBDS::HASTINGS | | Wed Oct 16 1991 16:17 | 2 |
| I know from checking with the Board of Health that they require a
septic system able to handle 110 gals/day/bedroom.
|
55.213 | lbs/gal | ISLNDS::BUCK | What's an impersonal name? | Wed Oct 16 1991 17:06 | 4 |
| --> (Now what is 6.8 x something else....??? sigh....)
6.8 rings a bell as the number of lbs/gal of water
|
55.214 | One gallon weighs 8 pounds | ASDS::TEMTE | | Wed Oct 16 1991 18:03 | 5 |
| One gallon of water weighs 8 pounds.
1 pound
128 ounces * ----------- = 8 pounds
16 ounces
|
55.215 | Mixing wrong ounces | RAB::SUNG | Live Free or Live in MA | Wed Oct 16 1991 18:43 | 7 |
| RE: .10
I think you have your ounces mixed up. 128 ounces of water (for a
gallon) are VOLUME ounces, whereas 1 pound is 16 WEIGHT ounces.
They are not interchangeable.
-al
|
55.216 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Is the electric chair UL approved? | Wed Oct 16 1991 19:21 | 3 |
| A gallon of water weighs about 8.3 lbs.
-Mike
|
55.217 | there is a relation... | POBOX::KAPLOW | Have package, will travel | Wed Oct 16 1991 19:24 | 3 |
| The "english" measure system is such that an ounce(volume) of
water weighs an ounce(weight). The metric system is also so
designed, one cubic centimeter of water weighs one gram.
|
55.218 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Thu Oct 17 1991 09:10 | 5 |
| re: .13
I don't believe 1 ounce volume of water = 1 ounce weight of water.
It's close, but it's not exact...unlike the metric system in which,
as you rightly point out, 1 cc = 1 gm, by definition (at some n
degrees C).
|
55.219 | | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Is the electric chair UL approved? | Thu Oct 17 1991 12:16 | 10 |
| re .13:
No. The English system is based on such units as the length from some king's
nose to the fingertip of his outstretched arm, the weight of a grain of barley,
etc. The conversion from oz. liquid to oz. weight of water is close, but
not exact.
The weight of a gallon of water is 8.338 lbs.
-Mike
|
55.220 | A pint's a pound the world around. | HDLITE::NEWMAN | Chuck Newman, 297-5499, MRO4-1/H16, Pole J13 | Thu Oct 17 1991 15:10 | 28 |
| �The conversion from oz. liquid to oz. weight of water is close, but
�not exact.
�The weight of a gallon of water is 8.338 lbs.
I don't know what *you* have been drinking in your pint container, but it sure
isn't water!
At STP (0 deg. C, 1 atm of pressure), water has a density of 1000 Kgram/cubic
meter. It's 958 Kg/m� at 100 deg C.
At sea level, one kg weighs 2.20462 pounds, so:
1 lb *(1 kg/2.20462 lb)*(1 m�/1000 kg)*(61024 in�/m�)*(1 gal/231 in�)*(8 pt/gal)
= .959 pounds/pint
If you use the density of water at 100 deg C, you get:
1 lb *(1 kg/2.20462 lb)*(1 m�/958 kg)*(61024 in�/m�)*(1 gal/231 in�)*(8 pt/gal)
= 1.001 pounds/pint
So, according to my conversion factors (Physics, Parts I and II, Halliday and
Resnick), one pint of water weighs one pound at some temperature pretty close to
boiling.
-- Chuck Newman
|
55.221 | boil a gallon of water != a gallon of boiling water | RAMBLR::MORONEY | Is the electric chair UL approved? | Thu Oct 17 1991 15:56 | 7 |
| The reference density of water is always given at its maximum density (at 4�C
or ~39�F) so "a pint's a pound" is wrong at the reference density. I suppose
it may be true there may be a density where this is the case, but how often
does one have to worry about the weight of boiling water, compared to the
weight of room temp. or cold water?
-Mike
|
55.222 | I beg to differ, Chuck | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Thu Oct 17 1991 16:00 | 16 |
| .16, .15:
Well, I've read before that the adage is off by a few percent, and that
a gallon weighs 8-and-1/3 pounds.
Are you sure that the figures you quote (.959 lbs/pint, and 1.001
lbs/pint) aren't the *reciprocal* of the actual figures? The way they
read, the density of water increases with temperature, which
contradicts your first statement about the density of water. Also,
1.000/.959 * 8 is 8.336, which fits what I've read before...
1.000/1.001 * 8 is just under 8 (pounds per gallon) -- but I'll bet
most readers here have much more experience with *substantial*
quantities of water between 0� and maybe 30�C, than between 70� and
100�.
Dick
|
55.223 | So *that* is why 1 liter is more than 1000 cc's! | HDLITE::NEWMAN | Chuck Newman, 297-5499, MRO4-1/H16, Pole J13 | Thu Oct 17 1991 17:21 | 13 |
| Re:.18�Are you sure that the figures you quote (.959 lbs/pint, and 1.001
� lbs/pint) aren't the *reciprocal* of the actual figures? The way they
� read, the density of water increases with temperature, which
� contradicts your first statement about the density of water.
No contradiction -- I reported inverse density (pounds/pint)
Re:.17�The reference density of water is always given at its maximum density
Ah, so *that* is why 1 liter has a volume of 1000.028 cc's: That's at it's
maximum density.
-- Chuck Newman
|
55.224 | Old saws | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Fri Oct 18 1991 12:30 | 10 |
| The saying I learned, "a pint's a pound the world around", is only true in
the US. We still use the pint that England used back when were colonies.
The United Kingdom changed over some time ago. I think their saying is
"a pound and a quarter is a pint of water". Or is that "a pint and a
quarter is a pound of water"?
As if the question of the weight of a pint wasn't confused enough already.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
55.225 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Fri Oct 18 1991 16:04 | 1 |
| Time to get out an accurate scale and weigh a gallon of water.
|
55.226 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Oct 18 1991 16:13 | 3 |
| re .21:
Don't forget the accurate graduate, accurate thermometer, and distilled water.
|
55.227 | | RANGER::WEBER | | Fri Oct 18 1991 16:55 | 5 |
| Water
" ...weight per gallon (15 degrees C) 8.3337 pounds."
American Heritage Dictionary, 1978
|
55.228 | :-) | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Mon Oct 21 1991 09:28 | 3 |
| Let's go have a pint and get back to the topic.
ed
|
55.229 | not taught as '0.0000' exact-it's a R.O.T. | EMDS::PETERSON | | Mon Oct 21 1991 13:36 | 12 |
|
I was taught the 'pint weighs a pound.' thing along with
'a gallon weighs about 8 lbs." as quick rule of thumb
calculations, meant for making estamates. Not for precise
calculations.
So, if someone says that they are thinking about putting a 500 gal
water tank on the roof of their house you can tell them that they
are looking at about (500 x 8, or 4000 lbs.) two tons sitting on their
rafters.
Things like that.
|
55.230 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Oct 21 1991 14:09 | 4 |
| Getting back to the base note, I think the insert with my last water bill
showed the average consumption. I'm pretty sure I tossed it, but if anyone
with Boston Water still has the insert, they could tell you. For that matter,
you could call Boston Water or any other water utility and ask.
|
55.231 | "little over 8 pounds per gallon" sounds close enough | SSBN1::YANKES | | Mon Oct 21 1991 17:32 | 9 |
|
Re: .most
All this attempted accuracy in a notesfile whose subject deals with
things like "2x4s" that are not only not 2x4, but aren't even the same size
depending upon how dry they are and how two 2x4s put together don't equal a
2x8??? ;-)
-c
|
55.232 | global liquid assets | CFSCTC::PALMER | | Wed Oct 23 1991 18:12 | 30 |
| Aside from the weighty topic at hand, here's some perspective perhaps more
useful to the author of .0:
During the last 100 years, people's water consumption has increased lots.
In some water-rich countries (eg the US), water usage is
66-100 gals/day
per capita. This is far above the UN recommended daily supply of
16 gals/day/person.
Many mideast countries as well as S. Africa, India, China, UK, etc. may face
water shortages by the year 2000 due to population density and limited supply.
country population people/well
USA 250M 20
Sweden 8.4M 42
Nigeria 20M 25,000
Ethiopia 25M 250,000
Water resource renewal occurs via globally interacting ecosystems...
Now - what were you wondering about those low-flow showerheads?
Mark
(I wonder if they'll have low-flow car,clothes, and dishwashers?)
|
55.233 | 1 liter := 1000 cm� | ASDG::NOORLAG | Yankee Dutchman | Thu Oct 24 1991 13:54 | 7 |
| Re .19
The liter *used* to be defined that way. In the early 70's the Liter was
redefined to being EXACTLY 1000 cm�.
The discussion in this topic shows why water usage should be measured in m�
(= 1000 liter).
|
55.234 | | CSC32::GORTMAKER | Whatsa Gort? | Fri Oct 25 1991 21:41 | 6 |
| re.28
low flow car washes...
Most americans are all to hung up on washing their car and having the
greenest(what an oxymoron) lawn on the block.
-j
|
55.235 | | FSDB47::FEINSMITH | Politically Incorrect And Proud Of It | Fri Oct 25 1991 23:13 | 6 |
| My truck may not be spotless, but I do prefer that it resemble the
original color. Plus some of the crud that settles on the car is not
very good for the paint, especially road salt in winter. As to lawns,
go xenoscape (sp?), especially in dry climates.
Eric
|
55.7 | Code question. | TALLIS::KOCH | DTN226-6274 ... If you don't look good, DEC doesn't look good. | Mon Dec 30 1991 15:16 | 8 |
| A cousin of mine thinks there is a part of the plumbing code that
specifies 3/4" pipe if there is more than one faucet on the run and 1/2"
pipe only if there is one faucet at the end of it. I'm skeptical because
all the supply plumbing in my house is 1/2", regardless of how many
faucets are on the line.
Is it ok to use 1/2" throughout, or should pipes nearer to the street
be 3/4"?
|
55.8 | | KOALA::DIAMOND | No brag, Just fact. | Mon Dec 30 1991 17:36 | 4 |
|
I don't know about code, but that's the way my house plumbing is done.
Mike
|
55.9 | | CSC32::GORTMAKER | Whatsa Gort? | Mon Dec 30 1991 18:45 | 10 |
| I have 3/4" feed to the water heater, outside faucets and UG sprinklers
1/2" to everything else the incoming water line is 3/4". You can really
tell the difference between 1/2 & 3/4" when it comes to high volume
applications like UG sprinklers. I doubt there is a code around this
the main consideration is price 1/2" being cheaper to install than
3/4".
If the incoming feed pipe is only 1/2" having 3/4" inside the house
is a waste.
-j
|
55.10 | | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-04/S23 -- dtn 381-2684 | Tue Dec 31 1991 15:05 | 13 |
| I don't think its code, but I believe it is good practice to use
3/4" pipe for all cold water lines that feed (1) two or more
faucets, (2) any faucet designed to accept a hose, and (3) the hot
water heater. This generally provides noticeably better water
flow. 1/2" pip is fine for the end of the pipe run to the last
faucet.
For the hot water lines 1/2" pipe is generally used so that there
is less cold water to run off before the faucet runs hot.
This applies to single family homes. Different practice is
appropriate for multi-family homes (apartments, condos, etc.) and
for commercial/industrial situations.
|
55.25 | pump/tank to allevuate water pressure problem | VAXWRK::OXENBERG | illigitimus non conderendum es | Mon Nov 09 1992 16:25 | 9 |
|
I'd like to increase the water pressure in my house. I've heard
that one can buy a pump (and pressure tank?) to alleviate the
problem.
Would anyone care to offer me some advice?
Thanks
-Phil
|
55.26 | | MANTHN::EDD | When monkeys fly... | Mon Nov 09 1992 16:27 | 5 |
| You can get a bit more pressure by tweaking/replacing the pressure
switch on your existing rig, but I believe the way to do it properly
is by using bigger pipe...
Edd
|
55.27 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Okay Bill...now what? | Tue Nov 10 1992 07:49 | 17 |
| re: .12
I take it you have town water that you want to boost the pressure of?
If so yes, I suppose you could buy a pump and pressure tank to boost
the pressure. It would basically be the same rig as you would have
with a well, except you wouldn't need a very fancy pump - the water
would be right there and all the pump would have to do is push it into
the pressure tank.
Before you do that though, check to see if there is a pressure
regulator on your incoming supply line (I'm still assuming here that
you have town water). Sometimes the pressure regulator (if there
is one) can get crudded up and cut the pressure too much.
If you have old galvanized iron pipe anywhere (possibly coming in
from the street?), it may be corrodded and plugged up inside. Only
solution there is new pipe.
|
55.28 | City water? Call. | KAYAK::GROSSO | Prevent & Prepare or Repent & Repair | Tue Nov 10 1992 09:45 | 18 |
| I live in Nashua, NH and am on city water. When I moved in, the water pressure
was so poor that if the neighbor was watering his yard, I could barely shower.
(Was that a pun?) The neighbor at the end of street couldn't wash clothes
and do anything else at the same time. They'd been there 7 years and watched
it get progressively worse without doing a thing.
Against one neighbor's recommendation, I called the water company. I suspect
my neighbor thought we'd all wind up paying for whatever remedial action was
necessitated. They came and metered our pressure. We resisted the urge to
do laundry/shower/water/dishes all at the same time and still they recorded
a low of 8 psi at the end of the street. Our low was in the teens so at least
some water got to the second floor.
The water company installed a new water line and as a result repaved the
crumbling alley which they destroyed in the process. I got water my lawn now,
and I'll have sufficient pressure for an additional bath in the attic now, the
kids got a smoothly paved alley for cycling and skateboarding, and it cost us
one phone call, that's all.
|
55.29 | | VAXWRK::OXENBERG | illigitimus non conderendum es | Tue Nov 10 1992 10:25 | 20 |
| > I take it you have town water that you want to boost the pressure of?
The water is from a community well, this particular development
gets its water from a common well.
> If so yes, I suppose you could buy a pump and pressure tank to boost
> the pressure. It would basically be the same rig as you would have
> with a well, except you wouldn't need a very fancy pump - the water
> would be right there and all the pump would have to do is push it into
> the pressure tank.
Are there different types, sizes?
> Before you do that though, check to see if there is a pressure
> regulator on your incoming supply line (I'm still assuming here that
> you have town water). Sometimes the pressure regulator (if there
> is one) can get crudded up and cut the pressure too much.
I'll check
Thanks.
/Phil
|
55.144 | outside water meter?? | STUDIO::ROBBINS | | Tue Mar 09 1993 12:20 | 11 |
| Has anyone put in a second water meter for outside (and presumably,
no sewarage) use only?
In our town (Natick, MA), the town was installing outside meters for
free (or $35) to assist with rising MWRA rates. This year they no
longer do that. Wouldn't you know, this year I've moved to a new house
and want an outside meter. They estimate we have a plumber install a
meter for about $600-800. Of course, they were guessing.
If a meter (from previous reply) cost about $50, and a plumber works
for about $50/hr. How long should it take?
|
55.148 | water pressure | CAPECD::HOLLAND | Gone With The Wind | Wed May 12 1993 15:41 | 8 |
|
I've got well water,and just had some plumbing work done (new pressure
valve) and now my water pressure is alot lowere than it was. Is
there a way for me to adjust this, or do I need to call the plumber
back
Ken
|
55.149 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Thu May 13 1993 08:59 | 6 |
| RE: .3
A water pressure reducer valve can be adjusted...but...if you paid the
plumber to install it, I would call him/her back.
Marc H.
|
55.150 | AIY -- Adjust it yourself | XK120::SHURSKY | If you're not lead dog, the view never changes. | Thu May 13 1993 11:05 | 7 |
| It's probably not worth the hassle of calling the plumber back. There was
a screw thingy in the middle of mine which I adjusted. I had some horrific
water hammer every time I turned off a faucet quickly. My water pressure
is 70+ psi. Great for putting in a lawn sprinkler system though. I didn't
need very many zones. ;-)
Stan
|
55.236 | home water pressure | CADVAX::MCDONOUGH | | Thu Feb 03 1994 11:48 | 5 |
| What is the proper average water pressure (PSI) for a residental home?
I am refering to the town supplied cold water on the house side of
the water meter anywhere along the distribution lines.
Thanks, Jim
|
55.237 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Thu Feb 03 1994 13:29 | 6 |
| RE: .0
60 PSI is considered a good value for a home.
My town supplies 110 PSI...I have a regulator.
Marc H.
|
55.238 | Where Is The Regulator | LJSRV2::LIU | Jazz Fish Zen Mambo | Thu Feb 03 1994 15:17 | 5 |
|
Is the regulator built into the meter? Where I am in Nashua
it seems like my faucets are running less pressure than I
am told you get in another part of town. Maybe I can
adjust this?
|
55.239 | 75 psi in Sudbury | ZENDIA::ROLLER | Life's a batch, then you SYS$EXIT | Thu Feb 03 1994 15:36 | 13 |
| Seeing as I just went through this earlier this week. In Sudbury, they
try to have 75 psi at the house. The std regulator that they use drops
it to 55-60 inside the house. Mine was just replaced. It failed,
slowly over the past n years to the point that we only had 24-25 PSI
out of it. The guy that replaced it said that the there are two
failure modes. Fail-open in which you get the full pressure into the
house pipes, rare, or fail-closed in which you get very low pressure
and flow in the house, much more common. It certainly is nice to have
the pressure back, but the shower now needs to be labeled hazardous to
your health since it will almost plaster you against the wall. Now
where did I put that restrictor. Oh, that's another note!
Ken
|
55.240 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Feb 04 1994 09:24 | 6 |
| It's not something you can adjust. Some parts of Nashua do have lower
pressure due to elevation. Call Pennichuck Water Works and ask them
about it. I know they have plans for a big storage tank in the general
"Exit 4" area to help with pressure problems.
Steve
|
55.241 | water pressure 60PSI | CADVAX::MCDONOUGH | | Mon Feb 07 1994 11:47 | 9 |
| I contacted my local water dept and was advised that 60 psi is a good
number to shoot for. He said that the water meters do not try to
reduce pressure as a matter of fact, the manufacurers go to great
lenghts not to introduce any pressure reductions.
I am installing an adjustable reducer this week with a spread of 25-75
PSI. this should do the job.
Thanks/Jim
|
55.246 | Water supply pipe replacement | DIEHRD::ES | Eugene Shvartsman | Tue Feb 22 1994 18:54 | 40 |
| Hello!
In my friend's house the water supply pipe is badly corroded and need to be
replaced. It is leaking now. This is before the water meter. My friend just
recently bought this house in Newton, MA. It is his first house and he isn't
very experienced homeowner. He called the town hall, some guys quickly arrived,
confirmed that pipe has to be replaced, only they can do that, but it is his
reponsibility to find contractors, who will dig the trench for the pipe.
The extra problem here that pipe goes as shown below:
house attached tiny paved
room front pedestrian
yard path
| <- 10' ->|<- 5' ->|<- 4' ->| paved street
------ |----------|
basement| soil
|
--------- <- basement floor
|
=======================================
water supply pipe
Note, the attached room has its own foundation, but no basement space under it.
So the questions are:
1) What is the best way to accomplish that? Is there some kind of mechanical
'mole' or something which will be able to burrow under the attached room?
2) What kind of contractors will be able to do such job?
3) How much it may cost?
4) Who is responsible for maintanence of water pipes before the water meter?
Thank you very much for your answers.
Gene
|
55.247 | | MANTHN::EDD | Enough to bore a blueser... | Wed Feb 23 1994 07:53 | 3 |
| Dig a new trench that doesn't go under the room...
Edd
|
55.248 | it can be pulled through | SMURF::WALTERS | | Wed Feb 23 1994 09:00 | 12 |
|
The pipe can often be replaced with a plastic pipe which is pulled
through without the need to dig a trench all the way. I would think
that the local water company would offer this service.
One thing to watch for - if a plastic replacement is used you may also
need to get an electrician to check and install a new ground. The
ground is often connected to the copper water feed.
Colin
|
55.249 | May have to be copper by code! | KELVIN::PACHECO | RON | Wed Feb 23 1994 10:26 | 8 |
| RE -1
Some locales require that supply lines be made of copper- colud be because of
the burst strength and the temperature stability of the copper and joints (or it
could be damn good plumbers' unions).
Gee, its a bummer that the municipality recognizes its responsibility but is
looking for the customer to flip the bill for the expensive part!
|
55.250 | passing the buck | ELWOOD::DYMON | | Wed Feb 23 1994 11:41 | 5 |
| Its called ...Keeping the cost down but passing it along!
Happy digging!
JD
|
55.251 | | MNCHKN::SUMNER | | Wed Mar 23 1994 21:24 | 30 |
| The 'locals' in Littleton MA also require:
- The pipe to be verified at (least) 4' below the surface
- 2' of clear sand below the service pipe
- 2' of clear sand to each side and over the top of the pipe
- A metal ribbon (supplied by them) over the sand so that...
(a) Metal detectors can locate and mark the pipe
(nocando with plastic pipe)
(b) Future diggers will see the tape before hitting
the pipe
- Their inspection of the required work before burrying the
whole thing.
LWD claims responsibility only to their outside shut-off valve
at the street. They won't turn on water to new/modified services
without inspection. The WILL supply all parts required to get
water connected to your main service in the house, they'll also
supply you with the bill for the aforementioned items...
I'ld suggest re-routing the pipe in the least disruptive manner.
As previosly mentioned, MAKE SURE an electrician verifies that
the plumbing is grounded after the service change. ( I wonder
how many people have all PVC connections to their stainless steel
kitchen sink with no supplimental ground wire... not to mention
GFI protection on electric outlets located near water outlets...)
Glenn
|
55.252 | | MIYATA::LEMIEUX | | Thu Mar 24 1994 07:16 | 17 |
| <As previosly mentioned, MAKE SURE an electrician verifies that
<the plumbing is grounded after the service change. ( I wonder
<how many people have all PVC connections to their stainless steel
<kitchen sink with no supplimental ground wire... not to mention
<GFI protection on electric outlets located near water outlets...)
Lot's of them. Many DIY'ers ( I'd say most)and some plumbers don't
think of it. You'd be surprised how many houses don't even have the
water pipe system grounded in anyway.
As for the GFI outlets, if they weren't required when the house was
built and your not modifying or repairing the outlet or remodeling
the area electrically around the "water outlet" they don't have
to be upgraded.
Paul
|
55.253 | | MNCHKN::SUMNER | | Sat Mar 26 1994 01:02 | 18 |
| > As for the GFI outlets, if they weren't required when the house was
> built and your not modifying or repairing the outlet or remodeling
> the area electrically around the "water outlet" they don't have
> to be upgraded.
Understood, GFI upgrades aren't required in the circumstances you
mentioned, however, in this DIYer's opinion it seems outright
foolish to not install GFI's on circuits near _every_ water source
simply because "the code doesn't require it", particularly given
the minimal cost and effort required.
I'm amazed (and sometimes just disgusted) at the negative reactions
I have received when suggesting to other DIY'ers a GFI on outdoor or
kitchen sockets. "What's that?", "too expensive" & "too complicated"
to name a few. The life you save may be your own...
Glenn
|
55.254 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Sat Mar 26 1994 18:12 | 6 |
| GFIs are cheap - $7 nowadays. I've got them everywhere.
Grounding my stainless steel sink? Never occurred to me, but it
seems like a good idea. I'll do it.
Steve
|
55.255 | | MIYATA::LEMIEUX | | Mon Mar 28 1994 08:08 | 11 |
| RE .7
As a Master electrician, I realize the potential dangers involved. I
wasn't saying don't put them in. I was simply presenting the other side of the
story. I also personally feel it would be foolish not to put them in. It's cheap
insurance.
Paul
|
55.242 | | CSOA1::BACH | They who know nothing, doubt nothing... | Tue Apr 12 1994 11:48 | 9 |
| How can you increase city water pressure?
Our pressure os pretty low, and we are going to add a 1/2 bath on the
first floor and a full bath on the third floor. (We only have a full
bath on the second floor)
Rgds,
Chip
|
55.243 | | LEZAH::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome MRO1-1/KL31 Pole HJ33 | Tue Apr 12 1994 11:55 | 8 |
| Check to see if you have a pressure regulator in your water line;
if you do, it's probably a somewhat cone-shaped gizzie just past
the water meter. That might be adjustable, or at least replacable
with one set to a higher pressure.
If you don't, or it can't be adjusted, you could always install
a pump and pressure tank setup, I suppose, as one would have for
a well.
|
55.244 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Apr 12 1994 15:23 | 6 |
| RE: .6
I've seen homes with a pump used to increase the public water sent to
the house. Unless you have a pressure regulator, its the only way.
Marc H.
|
55.245 | | CSOA1::BACH | They who know nothing, doubt nothing... | Wed Apr 13 1994 11:46 | 7 |
| RE: Marc and Steve
Thanks for the advice!
Regards,
Chip Bach
|
55.256 | water pressure in the yard | MROA::MACKEY | | Mon Apr 25 1994 11:58 | 8 |
| I have a water pressure problem with regards to running a garden
hose to an area of my property to water a garden. It appears that
the distance is to great to maintain a good working pressure.
Without relocating the area that I want the garden how can I
compansate for this?? Is there an inline pump that I could
purchase cheap and install. What about a small (50g) plastic
water tank with a small pump. Anybody run into this??
|
55.257 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Mon Apr 25 1994 12:28 | 6 |
| Re: .0
What size hose are you using? What is the pressure of the water at the
source?
Marc H.
|
55.258 | | MROA::MACKEY | | Mon Apr 25 1994 14:50 | 17 |
| I have tried using the larger of the two diameter hoses that I have
with the larger being best, but still not the results that I would
like to see. The house has it's own well with a pressure tank.
the tanks max pressure is 50psi and the pump kicks on at apx 38psi.
Also in my yard I have two faucets (old stlye that look like pumps)
that are run directly off the well pump. To make them work I
have to open one up and then run the water in the house until the
pump kicks on. then these yard faucets will supply water but without
much pressure. I'm also not sure if I would want to run the pump
at a constant while watering the garden. I'm gonna play around
with the hose diameters a little more coming from a faucet on the
house but I don't think I will be able to maintian a good constant
pressure.
Thanks, Colin
|
55.259 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Mon Apr 25 1994 15:12 | 8 |
| Re: .2
The only fix, short of a separate water supply, is to find a sprinker
for the garden that will work well with the presure you have. I use
a pump to supply water to my garden too. One of the sprinklers just
keeps the pump on, and the coverage is just right.
Marc H.
|
55.260 | Building next to town water tower? | NPSS::WADE | Network Systems Support | Fri Jun 24 1994 13:59 | 51 |
| x-posted in REAL_ESTATE conference
I'd like some objective opinions on building a house next to a town
water tower.
We are in the early phases of building a house on a 6 lot cul-de-sac.
The lot that we like may have to wait until next spring due to
deep hole testing and installion of perimeter drains for septic. We
don't want to wait.
Another lot is available at the very end of the cul-de-sac but it is
next to a town water tower.
LOT description
_____________________
| stone wall | m
| | e
| s | t
| t | a
| o | l
| n | water
| e ------- | f tower
| | house | | e
| w ------- | n
| a d | c
| l r | e
| l w i |
--------------a v----
y e
The lot is 3 acres, very private, mostly flat, wooded and no chance of
any houses being built within eyesight. The tower is painter green so it
trys to blend into the scenario but its still there. If we go this route
I would plant a staggered row of tall and thick evergreens to hide it from
view.
I guess one nice thing is nothing could be built on that side that would
distract from the privacy of the lot. Maybe I'm being too cautious. I
mean I've seen new houses built next to an antenna tower with light
beacons glaring at night. I could live with the water tower especially
once it is completely hidden from view with the row of evergreens.
My main concern is resale within the 10-15 year time frame.
Any opinions or experiences with property next to this type of feature?
Thanks,
Bill
|
55.261 | | COOKIE::LAWSON | Carpe Heli Diem, eh? | Sun Jun 26 1994 17:18 | 1 |
| Do large water trucks pull up to the tower at all hours of the morning?
|
55.262 | its only water! | ELWOOD::DYMON | | Thu Jun 30 1994 13:48 | 6 |
|
Just tell people its your well... Its a 50/50 shot. Some would
say, "oh whats that!" and other may say, "no problem." IMHO, if it
were me and get greens were covering it. I wouldnt mind.
JD
|
55.263 | Prevent freezing water lines? | DEBUG::GALLO | Fast/Cheap/Good... limit 2 please! | Wed Aug 03 1994 17:40 | 24 |
| We are building an insulated 8' x 12' storage shed to house the water
tanks for a 5 home common well. The shed will be used for a
water filtration system also! We will have an electric heater
to ensure the equipment/pipes do not freeze.
The supply and return lines from the well pump were just trenched
at 4 feet below ground, and run using 2" diameter schedule 80 pvc.
The pipes come up above ground, about 1 foot inside of the corner
where the shed will be built. We are about to have a concrete
slab poured, 5 inches thick, on an 8" stone bed, using 1/2" metal
rebar and other metal reinforcement.
My concerns are how we can be protected from freezing pipes!
1) Should we have used a pvc or metal sleeve around both pvc lines
that extended from 4 feet down to above ground? This would have
acted as a "conduit" carrying heat from the shed downward.
2) Should we have a concrete perimeter footing that extends at
least 42" underground along the corner area to prevent freezing
Without one of these steps, what's to keep the pipes from freezing???
Thanks for any suggestions. Paul Gallo
|
55.264 | | TOOK::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Wed Aug 03 1994 20:54 | 8 |
| I'd wrap the pipes with some sort of heat tape. I don't believe (but I
could be wrong) that pipes exiting the slab a foot from the outside
wall of the foundation are going to be sufficiently protected. At least
not in the Northeast. Little heat is going to travel downwards from
the slab, so I'd think that a foot or so below and one foot inside
the foundation, you're going to have frost.
-Jack
|
55.265 | | TOOK::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Wed Aug 03 1994 20:58 | 10 |
| On second thought, what if you brought the pipes up through a "sump"?
If it was open to the interior of the shed, and deep enough to go
below the frostline, you could mount a fan to circulate warm air
down into the sump.
Even with the heat tape, I'd hate to see the pipe surrounded by
concrete where there was a chance of freezing, say, if the heat
tape failed one day (as they eventually do.)
-Jack
|
55.266 | Add some 'Styrofoam' Too... | IMTDEV::COGAN | So, You Expect Me To Leap...Right? | Wed Aug 03 1994 23:17 | 27 |
| -1.
Good Idea! "Sump & Fan" is the way to go.
The way I see it, the reason that the ground freezes is the temp
adjacent to the surface. So, the 'ground' in the building, being
above 'freezing', would prevent the ground, within the building,
from freezing. However, at the edges of the building, the temp
will 'leak' in<from the side>, so care s/b taken along the
perimeter.
Try This:
Dig a 1 1/2' square hole around the pipes. Line the hole w/
2" styrofoam. The top of the 'foam' s/b 3" - 4" below finished
floor. Create a 1' x 1' wood form. Form should extend from 'pipe'
level, to finished floor<or above>. Center the form in the hole,
about 3" from the 'foam'. Pour the concrete in the form 1st<between
the form & the styrofoam>, and finish the rest of the floor.
Use the fan to direct the 'heat' down at the 'hole'.
Also, a 'cheap'<LOUD> alarm might be added to warn ya when the
temp, in the building, is below about 35 degs.
hth,
....jc
|
55.267 | A good 4' | ELWOOD::DYMON | | Thu Aug 04 1994 07:19 | 14 |
|
Hummmm. One large Ice cube!..:)
If anything, I wouldnt cement in the pipe just for the
fact when if ever you have to repair it or get to it.
I'd maybe go with the foam and heat tape. Make sure the building
is very well insolated... If i'm reading this right, you have multi
user? This should help keep the water moving on thoes cold days...
Their is a 2" poly pipe running 150' to the center of a freestall
barn. The watering bowl has a heater in it. 5yrs an no problems yet.
JD
|
55.268 | | WRKSYS::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Thu Aug 04 1994 18:04 | 19 |
| Heat tape is a bad idea -- you've already got a heater in the shed.
As others have said, simply dig a hole down several feet so that the
pipe is at the shed's air temperature all the way down to a point
down near or below the frost line. You can make the hole neat by
using a 4" drain pipe. That also provides a simple way to keep the
concrete from filling the hole when you pour the slab. The exact
depth isn't really cricical, since the heater heats the ground, too.
If you want to save energy for that electric heater, you can put
insulation into the ground around the perimeter of the shed, or
under the slab. Putting it under the slab is easier -- though
that would mean you have to insulate around the hole as well.
Putting it around the perimeter is usually cheaper, since it only
has to go down 2' to be as effective as if it's under the entire floor.
But whatever you do, make sure that there's a "termite gap" between
buried foam insulation and any wood.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
55.269 | permits etc. | BUSY::JWHITTEMORE | Carp Perdiem | Sat Aug 06 1994 22:11 | 13 |
| > <<< Note 5388.0 by DEBUG::GALLO "Fast/Cheap/Good... limit 2 please!" >>>
> -< Prevent freezing water lines? >-
>
> We are building an insulated 8' x 12' storage shed to house the water
> tanks for a 5 home common well. The shed will be used for a
> water filtration system also! We will have an electric heater
> to ensure the equipment/pipes do not freeze.
>
Just curious; don't you need state permits and yearly inspections to have
a well shared by multiple dwellings (or is is only if you're
$elling the water......) ?
|
55.30 | How do I increase water pressure? | STAR::ELSER | Operator, what's the number for 911? | Wed Mar 29 1995 11:38 | 11 |
|
Hi,
Is there any recommendations for increasing the water pressure in my
house without spending big $$$? We have a Well, so no town water is
involved.
Thanks,
-Dean
|
55.31 | | EVMS::MORONEY | Verbing weirds languages | Wed Mar 29 1995 13:46 | 7 |
| There should be an adjustable pressure switch somewhere, probably on
the pump if it's not a "down in the hole" pump.
Also check to see if your pressure tank is waterlogged (pump cycles often
with a rapid pressure fluctuation)
-Mike
|
55.32 | Thanks | STAR::ELSER | Operator, what's the number for 911? | Wed Mar 29 1995 14:04 | 7 |
|
Thanks Mike.
I'll give a check tonight.
-Dean
|
55.270 | Water Mains | CAPNET::ROSCH | | Thu May 04 1995 11:39 | 4 |
|
If there is a leak between the water mains in the street and the meter
in the home who's responsibility is it to fix - The City or the
Homeowner?
|
55.271 | | SMURF::WALLACE | Life's a beach, then you dive! | Thu May 04 1995 11:49 | 3 |
| I think it depends on where you live. I know that in some citys, if
the problem is outside your lot line, it's a city problem. If it's
inside the lot line, it's a homeowner problem.
|
55.272 | | CAPNET::ROSCH | | Fri May 05 1995 12:03 | 13 |
| I have just found out that the city takes responsibility between the
main and the shut-off valve. Between the shut-off valve and the
residence it's the home owners responsibility.
The shut-off valve is one-third the way into my driveway - dead center.
AND...the City has just informed me that it's on their side of the
shut-off valve - by a whisker!
So next Wednesday the City will dig up my driveway as much as they have
to and replace the shut-off valve. Then, of course, they have to repair
and patch my driveway etc. But it won't cost me a thing. It would have
cost me a minimum of $600 just to dig the hole if it was on my side of
the shut-off valve.
|
55.273 | Whew! | AWECIM::MCMAHON | Living in the owe-zone | Fri May 05 1995 12:51 | 5 |
| All things considered - you lucked out!! It's nice to hear a story go
this way once in a while. While I wouldn't wish a below-ground leak on
anybody, at least they're picking up the repair.
Good luck.
|
55.274 | Caveat! | JOKUR::FALKOF | | Fri May 05 1995 13:13 | 2 |
| ...but watch how they repave the driveway. Will they warrant the
driveway repair? For how many years?
|
55.50 | any cheap fix for clogged-up water pipes? | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Mon May 22 1995 18:11 | 30 |
| The house next door to mine on the downhill side sat vacant for about
18 months. I am very pleased that a nice family has now moved in
there, renting with an option to buy, since most of the tenants there
did not stay long and didn't take very good care of the place, so that
the house is now in pretty sad shape. The new lady told me that she
was planning on buying the house if getting it back into shape didn't
end up being too expensive, which I think would be terrific. The house
was built in 1972, same as my house. One of the things that is a real
problem there is that her water pressure is VERY low. Since that house
is about ten feet lower than my house, and my water pressure is usable
although higher would be better, I think, as does the new occupant,
that the pipes over there are full of sediment from the long time the
house sat empty. Both houses have galvanized steel pipes. She also
mentioned that her water has a lot of rust in it, which mine doesn't.
Is there any relatively simple and cheap way to flush out the pipes?
All of the neighbors are helping out getting that house back in shape,
because we are very pleased to see it occupied again, but any solution
that costs big bucks is not going to be real feasible. I'd hate to see
that place vacant again; it was turning into a real eyesore. I suppose
we can start by flushing the water heater tank, but she says that the
cold water has very low pressure too, so I'm afraid that all of the
pipes are full of crud. Will it work its way through the system now
that people are using the ater again? or is a major plumbing bill in
the future? - the landlord doesn't seem to be very interested in the
house anymore; during the whole time it was vacant, he showed up and
mowed the grass twice, and didn't do any other maintenance of any sort
that was noticeable.
/Charlotte
|
55.51 | Check for a regulator first | ZENDIA::ROLLER | Life's a batch, then you SYS$EXIT | Mon May 22 1995 18:26 | 13 |
| Do you have a pressure regulator on the water supply? If you do, then
it is probably near the meter. It's a somewhat cone shaped device with
(ususally) a screw on top. I had to have mine replaced about a 18
month ago because it failed. The person who replaced it, from the
local water district, stated that they will fail over time and there
are two failure modes. Mode one were it fails open and the pressure
inside the house goes way up. This is rare. And mode two where it
fails closed and the pressure inside the hose drops to about 20 pounds.
This is the common failure mode. In our case it failed closed and a
new regulator fixed the problem. FYI, they set the new regulator to 55
PSI.
Ken
|
55.52 | I don't think so - I don't have one | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue May 23 1995 10:39 | 10 |
| I don't have a pressure regulator, so I doubt the house next door has
one since they were built at the same time. Our water pressure is
pretty low at the best of times - the hill I live almost at the top of
is the highest point in town. On the very top of the hill, behind the
house two doors uphill from me, is the town's water pressure tank -
they pump a few feet of water up there to give us what water pressure
we have. The really low pressure problem seems to be unqieu to the
house next door.
/Charlotte
|
55.275 | Installing water line...how deep is frostline? | MJBOOT::STONESIFER | You are now entering the object zone... | Fri Sep 15 1995 14:38 | 5 |
| Just how deep must a waterline be in order to avoid freezing? I live in
Pennsylvania. Is there a source for this information (other than local codes)? I
understand that local code enforcement agencies may have additional requirements.
Thanks.
|
55.276 | | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Fri Sep 15 1995 16:33 | 5 |
| The rule of thumb I've always used in Upstate NY and New Hampshire is
4 feet. While you could potentially get away with less than that in
Pennsylvania (depending upon where - it wouldn't be the same in
Philadelphia as in Erie, necessarily), why take chances?
|
55.295 | ex | SALEM::LEMAY | | Mon Nov 11 1996 14:56 | 16 |
55.296 | | SHRMSG::BUSKY | | Mon Nov 11 1996 15:24 | 14 |
55.297 | open the drain again | CPEEDY::BRADLEY | Chuck Bradley | Mon Nov 18 1996 17:57 | 8 |
55.298 | need to replace valve first | SALEM::LEMAY | | Tue Nov 19 1996 10:48 | 6
|