T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
811.1 | | PBA::KEIRAN | | Fri Dec 30 1988 10:57 | 10 |
| Hi Gwen,
I would have thought it were the water pump, but it doesn't sound
like it since the water in the house is working. I would start
by calling a plumber, and maybe they can either help you or send
you in the right direction for help. Good Luck.
Linda
|
811.2 | | MARKER::HARRIS | | Fri Dec 30 1988 11:50 | 9 |
| Are you sure it isn't frozen? Sometimes the portion of the hydrant
that is above the ground (especially the handle) can freeze up.
We have to wrap heat tape on our frost-free hydrant. If we don't,
the upper portion freezes. When it does, it's not too hard to thaw
it with a heat gun (a hair dryer would work too). It's a lot
easier to just keep the heat tape plugged in.
|
811.3 | we have a similar problem | FRAGLE::PELUSO | | Fri Dec 30 1988 12:16 | 5 |
| I would agree w/ .2 also. Our hose is kept inside a heated office.
If soneone leaves part of it out at night, the the water in that
part freezes and we can't get any water from the hose. After the
pressure/heat builds up we then get some trickling water, and then
the ice chunks fly into the water bucket.
|
811.4 | Why not try..... | SHRFAC::CARIBO | | Fri Dec 30 1988 14:18 | 15 |
| I also agree with .2 about the hair dryer to get things working
again and then the heating tape to keep it that way. We have heating
tape on all of our pipes in the feed room.
About who to call, how about starting where you bought the pump.
If it isn't frozen maybe they have an idea of what it could possibly
be.
I wish you the best of luck, hope that this weekend isn't longer
in work than it need be.
Lorna
P.S. Happy New Year!!!!!
|
811.5 | Plumbing advice | MINK::MACEACHERN | Electric Horseman | Tue Jan 03 1989 09:05 | 20 |
| I just read your note, Gwen and I hope my reply is too late. In
other words I hope it is fixed already, but in case it is not...
I just put in on of those hydrants. At the bottom there is a drain
plug. If you can dig down to that plug you will be able to remove it and test
to see if the water is frozen between the water supply and the top of the
hydrant. Be sure that you turn off the water before you remove the plug and
have somebody help you by standing at the shutoff to turn the water on and off.
If you have water to that point, then the hair dryer all the way up
the hydrant pipe is what you need to do. If you have no water at the drain
plug then call the plumber.
About the digging, the hole will end up close to 4 feet deep, so make
sure you have enough room to dig the hole. Also realize that if you cannot
fix the problem you have saved some money by cutting down on the time the
plumber will be working, and thoses guys are expensive.
Good luck, and again I hope you advise is too late.
Dave.
|
811.6 | | AK1A::NEWELL | Veteran Network Rocker | Tue Jan 03 1989 09:43 | 3 |
| I believe there's also a bolt on the back side of the head which
causes the head to lift the valve.....make sure that's tight when
the head is closed....
|
811.7 | | CSC32::M_HOEPNER | | Tue Jan 03 1989 10:46 | 13 |
|
My dad always insisted that when we used the frost free hydrants
in COLD weather to gather ALL the buckets and fill them all at once
without turning off the hydrant in between buckets.
He indicated that the hydrant will freeze easier if you keep turning it
off and on (something about the water not draining correctly or too
much water accumulating at the bottom or in the pipe or something like
that...).
All I know is, I still use that technique. And when someone besides
me did the watering and DIDn't use that technique, my hydrant froze
and I had to get a plumber to thaw it out.
|
811.8 | Dawn Breaks | CURIE::GCOOK | | Fri Jan 06 1989 08:25 | 17 |
| Well...dawn just broke in Harvard with a crash that should have
registered on the Richter Scale!
I'm REAL embarassed but I feel like I owe all you nice people
the answer to my water problem. (God, why am I so dumb?)
Anyway, you know those little attachments you get for the faucet
so you can have two hoses hooked up at once? Well, I use one
so I can have a hose and a free spigot. And this Fall I didn't
take it off. And so THAT'S what was freezing. I took it off
and like magic the water runs.
(I fully expect to take a bunch of razzing for this)
Thanks everyone for your responses!
Gwen
|
811.9 | A lesson learned | GENRAL::BOURBEAU | | Fri Jan 06 1989 09:22 | 3 |
| Well Gwen,,we live and learn. At least it was a cheap fix.
George
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811.10 | Oops... | SHRFAC::CARIBO | | Mon Jan 09 1989 09:26 | 9 |
| Gwen, don't feel bad ! I did the same thing earlier this season,
only I thought our well pump quit, boy, am I glad it was only that
dumb little plastic attachment.
Sorry, I didn't think of that when I replied last time...
Lorna
|