Insulating an outside tap.
Discussion
We have an outside tap that I suspect was installed many years ago. The pipe comes out the ground and runs up the outside of a garage wall. There is no stop tap for it as far as we have ever found and I suspect it tees off the main or the "lead in" to our property.
The pipe was insulated with grey foam insulation but this year it frozen for the first time. So I added a second layer of foam and a foam hood for the tap.
It has still frozen up.
I suppose I could use some industrial type lagging, but it would look unsightly. Boxing in the tap is a possibility but it will be impractical.
Does anyone have any good ideas please?
It should have isolation before it goes outside, which should be turned off and the tap opened to avoid a burst pipe.
If it's on the main and bursts, you'll be buggered.
I don't think you'll be able to lag it well enough in these cold temperatures. Unless you can redo the pipe work, so it runs up inside the house and then goes through the wall at the correct height. That way there isn't much to freeze.
If it's on the main and bursts, you'll be buggered.
I don't think you'll be able to lag it well enough in these cold temperatures. Unless you can redo the pipe work, so it runs up inside the house and then goes through the wall at the correct height. That way there isn't much to freeze.
Gingerbread Man said:
It should have isolation before it goes outside, which should be turned off and the tap opened to avoid a burst pipe.
If it's on the main and bursts, you'll be buggered.
I don't think you'll be able to lag it well enough in these cold temperatures.
It doesn't ever go inside as far as we can make out. I suspect it feeds directly off the water main.If it's on the main and bursts, you'll be buggered.
I don't think you'll be able to lag it well enough in these cold temperatures.
Manks said:
Gingerbread Man said:
It should have isolation before it goes outside, which should be turned off and the tap opened to avoid a burst pipe.
If it's on the main and bursts, you'll be buggered.
I don't think you'll be able to lag it well enough in these cold temperatures.
It doesn't ever go inside as far as we can make out. I suspect it feeds directly off the water main.If it's on the main and bursts, you'll be buggered.
I don't think you'll be able to lag it well enough in these cold temperatures.
I would make sure you know how to turn this off and go buy a long reach tap key if needed.
Just in case.
dave_s13 said:
Do you know where your main isolating tap is? Usually in the footpath.
I would make sure you know how to turn this off and go buy a long reach tap key if needed.
Just in case.
I would try and turn this off now as a test. You may find it's buried below 6 inches of mud and the first time you try and turn off the water it snaps off as mine did. Better it breaks when you haven't got an urgent need to turn it off!I would make sure you know how to turn this off and go buy a long reach tap key if needed.
Just in case.
ledger said:
dave_s13 said:
Do you know where your main isolating tap is? Usually in the footpath.
I would make sure you know how to turn this off and go buy a long reach tap key if needed.
Just in case.
I would try and turn this off now as a test. You may find it's buried below 6 inches of mud and the first time you try and turn off the water it snaps off as mine did. Better it breaks when you haven't got an urgent need to turn it off!I would make sure you know how to turn this off and go buy a long reach tap key if needed.
Just in case.
ledger said:
dave_s13 said:
Do you know where your main isolating tap is? Usually in the footpath.
I would make sure you know how to turn this off and go buy a long reach tap key if needed.
Just in case.
I would try and turn this off now as a test. You may find it's buried below 6 inches of mud and the first time you try and turn off the water it snaps off as mine did. Better it breaks when you haven't got an urgent need to turn it off!I would make sure you know how to turn this off and go buy a long reach tap key if needed.
Just in case.
Yorkshire water were pretty good though and had a new one sorted within the week.
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