Turning water back on
Author
Discussion

LennyM1984

Original Poster:

891 posts

84 months

Wednesday 15th January
quotequote all
Next Friday we move into our new house and I will need to "bring it all back to life." It has been unoccupied for the past year (probate) and during that time the water has been mostly off.

We're planning to do quite a lot of work to the house so aren't unduly concerned about minor niggles but equally I would like to avoid water flooding it.

So my question is... What is the best practice when turning the water back on. I know you need to do it slowly and crack a few taps to avoid pressure issues but is there anything else I should do/check first? I'm reasonably handy so can replace/solder pipe if need be bit i'd prefer to avoid issues in the first place if at all possible

Mr Pointy

12,571 posts

175 months

Wednesday 15th January
quotequote all
Was the system drained & does it have tanks in the loft? If it was drained you are probably safe but if it wasn't & there are tanks in the loft then a visual check up there would be worthwhile. I fthe CH system is showing boiler presure that's a good sign.

Condi

18,973 posts

187 months

Wednesday 15th January
quotequote all
Just turn it on and see what leaks! Don't need to do anything special. You'll need to open the taps to get the air out anyway, so just open the a couple and then turn on the main stop valve.

The biggest risk could have been frozen pipes if it was not drained, but you'll only know that when you turn everything on and just go from there.

simon_harris

2,148 posts

50 months

Wednesday 15th January
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I've no real idea but if it were me I'd open all the taps and let pressure back into the system slowly to try and avoid any airlocks and water hammer type stuff.

Regbuser

5,708 posts

51 months

Wednesday 15th January
quotequote all
Firstly, is the water off at the service stopcock in the footpath outside the property?

Make sure the house inlet is off, then open this up, you might need a long adjustable.

Then, and with two people present, open the kitchen cold tap, a downstairs cold tap, and an upstairs cold tap.

Then with you at the house inlet, slowly open this and have the other person run around the place checking water coming out.

If there's a leak, it's usually in the first run of pipe up to the hot water cylinder. Check this.

If all okay, then run all taps through for a couple of minutes.
If not okay, isolate and make good leaking joints - press fit / compression fit plastic can be leaky if not kept wet and pressurised.

The hot water cylinder should fill, but will need venting; there'll be a overpressure drain valve for this; open it and let the gurgling out until water runs solidly through. Check it's discharging outside.

Once cylinder full, open all hot taps for a couple of minutes.

Pressurise your boiler via the filling loop.

Is your boiler oil or gas?

Select HW, fire the boiler and heat the cylinder. Once hot, check all hot water taps, then showers.

Select CH, fire the boiler and check the circulation pump is operating; bleed all radiators.

Repressurised filling loop to boiler if required.

If no HW or CH, check if the diverter valves are operating correctly; if need be used their manual latch to force open or closed.



Edited by Regbuser on Wednesday 15th January 10:55

Jobbo

13,416 posts

280 months

Wednesday 15th January
quotequote all
Having had a burst pipe over the weekend, I do hope the system was drained down. Our previous house, boughf in 2017 from probate having been unoccupied for 18+ months, was fully drained down and turning the mains water back on in mid-summer didn't give me any cause for concern. I did have to do it at the water company point in the front hedge because the stopcock was seized, but at least seized open.

Refilling the vented heating system was more of an issue because of the manual opening each in turn to bleed air and the fact it filled the radiators very slowly from the header tank. Keeping an eye on any tanks in the loft to make sure ball valves aren't seized is also important.

Over the year or so after moving in, we had a couple of issues - one was that the ~50 yr old copper gained a pinhole which gradually flooded the void under the spare room floor. It was fixed easily once we'd spotted it. The other was after we'd changed the water cylinder, the main cold feed in the loft had been joined with a plastic fitting and that popped off, causing an interesting water feature out of one of the light switches. Again, easy to fix fortunately but I'm glad I was around when it popped. Anyway, keep your eye on things for a good while after turning it back on.

LennyM1984

Original Poster:

891 posts

84 months

Wednesday 15th January
quotequote all
Regbuser said:
Firstly, is the water off at the service stopcock in the footpath outside the property?

Make sure the house inlet is off, then open this up, you might need a long adjustable.

Then, and with two people present, open the kitchen cold tap, a downstairs cold tap, and an upstairs cold tap.

Then with you at the house inlet, slowly open this and have the other person run around the place checking water coming out.

If there's a leak, it's usually in the first run of pipe up to the hot water cylinder. Check this.

If all okay, then run all taps through for a couple of minutes.
If not okay, isolate and make good leaking joints - press fit / compression fit plastic can be leaky if not kept wet and pressurised.

The hot water cylinder should fill, but will need venting; there'll be a overpressure drain valve for this; open it and let the gurgling out until water runs solidly through. Check it's discharging outside.

Once cylinder full, open all hot taps for a couple of minutes.

Pressurise your boiler via the filling loop.

Is your boiler oil or gas?

Select HW, fire the boiler and heat the cylinder. Once hot, check all hot water taps, then showers.

Select CH, fire the boiler and check the circulation pump is operating; bleed all radiators.

Repressurised filling loop to boiler if required.

If no HW or CH, check if the diverter valves are operating correctly; if need be used their manual latch to force open or closed.



Edited by Regbuser on Wednesday 15th January 10:55
Thanks, that's really helpful and exactly what I was looking for. The water and boiler were disconnected by a plumber according to the seller and so I would hope have been drained down properly (no tank in the loft mind). I will follow your steps to get everything flowing and bled.

Thanks again PH brain trust

Richard-D

1,500 posts

80 months

Wednesday 15th January
quotequote all
We haven't had a Winter with a really long cold spell for a while so there's a good chance everything will be fine. My previous house had stood empty for a couple of years through colder winters and was fine despite nothing having been drained.

TwistingMyMelon

6,450 posts

221 months

Wednesday 15th January
quotequote all
Watch out for any tanks in lofts going mad when they refill.

I turned the water off for a fews weeks in a commercial building.

When I turned it back on water was spraying out of a random tank that I never knew was there and which had been fine for 10 years!

I think the float got jammed, limescale formed as well , only did it for a minute but enough to soil a ceiling!!


Richard-D

1,500 posts

80 months

Saturday 25th January
quotequote all
So, does every room now have a free, built-in fire suppression system then?

Rough101

2,728 posts

91 months

Sunday 26th January
quotequote all
If you have a tank, I’d be wanting that cleaned and chlorinated along with any shower heads in addition to the allowing water only through open outlets at first and doing that slowly and fully flushing.

LennyM1984

Original Poster:

891 posts

84 months

Sunday 26th January
quotequote all
Richard-D said:
So, does every room now have a free, built-in fire suppression system then?
Ha ha thankfully no. Took me about two hours to find the stopcock (helpfully hidden in an enclosed compartment beneath a shelf that was invisible unless you removed the shelf) but once located all went well.

The executors had had a plumber round to turn the water off and so everything appeared to have been drained down properly.

We have a leaky toilet in one of the bathrooms but that's an entirely different issue (which I kind of suspected when we viewed the house) and is my crap (hopefully not literally) job for today

chrisch77

840 posts

91 months

Sunday 26th January
quotequote all
TwistingMyMelon said:
Watch out for any tanks in lofts going mad when they refill.

I turned the water off for a fews weeks in a commercial building.

When I turned it back on water was spraying out of a random tank that I never knew was there and which had been fine for 10 years!

I think the float got jammed, limescale formed as well , only did it for a minute but enough to soil a ceiling!!
This would be my main concern if the plumbing has been ‘dry’ for some time. I would pop down to screwfix and pick up a new ball valve for the cold water storage tank (and boiler expansion tank if appropriate) and get this fitted before turning the water back on.

Richard-D

1,500 posts

80 months

Sunday 26th January
quotequote all
Glad to hear there was no damage thumbup. I suspected you would be fine, been a few winters since a really long cold spell.