T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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969.1 | | TYCOBB::E_BARKER | | Wed Jun 07 1989 14:28 | 5 |
| I WOULD SUPECT THE WATER NOISES YOU ARE HEARING IS WATER DRAINING
PASSED THE HYDRANT DRAIN . I WOULD THINK THAT THE WATER YOUR HORSE
RAN PLUS ALL THE RAIN WE HAVE HAD HAS RAISED THE WATER TABLE AROUND
THE HYDRANT. WHICH IS COLLECTING VS DRAINING... I WOULD SUGEST WAITING
A WEEK OR SO TO SEE IF THE NOISE STOPS. IF NOT GET OUT THE SHOVEL...
|
969.2 | Is it frozen? | NUGGET::MENARD | | Wed Jan 22 1992 10:58 | 15 |
| Sunday night when I fed the horses my hydrant wouldn't work. I have an
all electric house, so occassionally the waterpipe going to the barn
freezes in my basement. I turned on the heat tape (in my basement),
and 1/2 an hour later I had water in the barn again.
Monday a.m. I went to water them and the handle of the hydrant will not
lift up. I figured it must be frozen and used a hair dryer on it for
about 15 minutes - to no avail.
How do I tell if it is frozen vs broken? Do the handles break?
I've had it for 3 years and this is the first winter I've had a
problem.
Thanks,
kathy
|
969.3 | Heat tape? | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Wed Jan 22 1992 12:17 | 6 |
| Is it still "broken"? Mine freezes, so I have a heat tape on it.
With the weather so cold the past few days, it could be that even the
hair dryer didn't thaw it enough, since the hair dryer only heats one
spot at a time.
-ellie
|
969.4 | ex | NUGGET::MENARD | | Wed Jan 22 1992 13:42 | 9 |
| Yes, it's still not working.
What freezes on yours? I've never had it freeze before. It's designed
for the water to drain back down 4-5' underground, so I guess I'm just
surprised it's frozen.
Maybe I'll pick up more heat tape on the way home and try that tonight.
Kathy
|
969.5 | Trust me. It's frozen! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Admire spirit in horses & women! | Wed Jan 22 1992 13:46 | 23 |
| Boy, does that sound familiar! Our hydrant in PeanutButter...oops
that's Peterborough had that problem rather regularly in the winter.
It is frozen but not up near the handle. It is most likely frozen where
it goes through the floor or into the ground. The &^*%&*^% things
always seem to accumulate just enough water there to freeze and
therefore become impossible to open.
If you aim your heat source at that area, it should thaw it out. As ellie
suggested, a heat tape will thaw it and keep it from freezing in the
future. BUT, I am paranoid about heat tapes. I have known too many
people who had barn fires from defective heat tapes. So, I always just
struggled with the thing after it froze.
After you get your hydrant working again, you may want to check its
adjustment. If it is not properly adjusted, it can not drain properly
and will leave some water in the system...which could be the cause of
the freezing in the first place.
To check a hydrant, you turn it on and let it run for a couple seconds
to get a good flow going. Then shut it off and put the palm of your
hand flat over the spout to close it off. You should feel quite a
strong suction on your hand if the hydrant is working properly.
|
969.6 | | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Wed Jan 22 1992 14:01 | 2 |
| They had this problem at my barn and the owners went with a heat tape
on the handle and I think down the shaft/pipe.
|
969.7 | light bulb ? | KAHALA::HOLMES | | Thu Jan 23 1992 10:31 | 10 |
|
One of the barns at the Groton Fair Grounds used to have the tank
from the well right in the barn. It was very small, maybe 10
gallons so they build a box around the tank and just kept a
light bulb inside the box. I guess that was enough heat to keep
it from freezing.
Never tried it myself but it seems safer than heat tapes.
Bill
|
969.8 | | NUGGET::MENARD | | Thu Jan 23 1992 11:14 | 12 |
| Sounds like this may be something I can count on happening in the
future, too, Ughhh!
My horses have 24 hrs access to the barn/stalls/field. I'm afraid to
use anything electrical, as I KNOW they'd play with it or chew it.
Maybe, tho, I can use the heat tape for periods when I'm around to
supervise, then take it off immediately. The box idea was a good one
too!
Thanks,
Kathy
|
969.9 | Simple and Free Solution | MSBCS::A_HARRIS | | Thu Jan 23 1992 11:59 | 12 |
| We had trouble with our hydrant last winter that required having a
plumber look at it. The hydrant froze despite heat tape. The plumber
said that the place where they often freeze up is the little nozzle
where the water comes out. So last winter and this winter we removed
the nozzle (put it back on in non-freezing weather because it is a
safty device) and haven't had any trouble. We don't use heat tape
anymore. And our barn is cold. There are only two horses and
they go in and out 24-hours a day. Despite the near-zero temperatures
we've had recently the water comes gushing out, even at 5:30 am--the
coldest part of the day.
-Andrea-
|
969.10 | RE: Problem with Hydrant | BLUMON::BAER | Garry R. Baer, (603)881-0483 | Wed Jan 29 1992 13:37 | 51 |
|
There are basically 2 things that can go wrong with the "basic" barn
Hydrant:
1) Adjustment wrong. This will prevent the valve (4 feet in the ground)
from opening/closing correctly. We have a MARK IV, and the
final 6" of rod comming up the pipe used to come loose, thereby
changing the 'travel' of the rod. Also, the rod usually screws into
the plunger @ the botton, and that can come loose as well. Winter repair
involves CAREFULL thawing of the pipe with a large heat source
(space heater), then disassembling the hydrant "head", locating, the
fixing the problem. Always fun on those 5 degree nights!
2) drainage valve clogged undergound. Get those shovels ready, as there is no
easy (read cheap-$$$) way out of this one, unless you have a free
weekend, a spare backhoe, and are able to do-it-yourself...
a)I have helped fix/dig up/repair 12 Hydrants and most of the problems
were caused by improper care in designing the pit under the drain.
Good pits go down 2-3' beyond the trench depth of 4', and 4-5' across,
then backfill with rocks about softball-sized. After seting the
hydrant in place, build rocks up another 6-12", then install plastic
over the top, like an umbrella, tying it tightly around the pipe.
This will prevent fill from settling down over time (from above)
due to excess water from the hydrant during normal usage. Its the
"plastic umbrella" that most plumbers/installers skip. Done correctly
the Hydrant should wear out before you have dranage problems. Not
alot of fun diging 4 feet into the ground this time of year...
b) "stuff" in the water. Anyone with rust, silt, etc... in their water
should install a SEPERATE water filter on the line that feeds the
Hydrant. What looks relatively clean can occassionally pickup flakes
from the "older" household pipes. Additionally the well can generate
silt during extended usages which cause "drain-down" in the well
itself. When this occurs, the silt buildup in the well is exposed and
collapses back into the well. This usually clears up quickly, but
the well pump picks it up and cheerfully pumps it into your house &
barn hydrant. This seems to occur with people who have large, sudden
water usages (barns, new thirsty lawns, filling a waterbed, flushing
a boat's motor on "gardenhose headphones" in your yard, etc...),
as opposed to constant, continual usage of the same volume. Same
solution as (a) above. Again, usually not many volenteers to be
] found for a January "BIG DIG"!
Either way, take the time, find the cause of the problem, and get it
fixed. God forbid you need the hydrant for something *IMPORTANT* (midnight vet
call, fire-{yours or a neighboor}, etc...) only to find your hydrant is only
useful as a coat-rack!...
Cheers,
Garrry
|
969.11 | | NUGGET::MENARD | | Wed Jan 29 1992 14:48 | 18 |
| Re .10.....Ughhhh
It would not be fun to try to dig it up this time of year, particularly
since the horses tend to knock the water over in that specific spot,
making the group frozen.
After that cold spell, when it got up in the 40's one day, it thawed
and has been fine since.
Not being very mechanical in nature, I'm not sure how to determine if
it is adjusted correctly. The trench was about 3' wide, and a total of
5-6'deep. The hydrant is down approx. 4', with sand and rocks making
up the difference to the 6' depth. I then have more rocks for about 3'
then the dirt. I never even thought of putting plastic to prevent the
gravel from washing down. Guess that might account for the "dip"
around the hydrant:-(
Kathy
|
969.12 | | NUGGET::MENARD | | Wed Jan 29 1992 14:49 | 3 |
| Re .11 that should've been
ground frozen (not group frozen:-)
|
969.13 | Need Hyrdant !!!!! | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Fri Oct 02 1992 10:01 | 7 |
| Anyone know where I can get a new hydrant in the greater Lowell/COncord
area -- or even farther away. I need one! I just had my old one dug
up, knowing they Agway had at least one avaiable. Well, they have
exactly one, and it's defective. I've tried UCF in Littleton, who told
me that "any hardware store: had them -- HAH!
-ellie
|