It doesn’t freeze here too often, but when it’s going to we’ll go outside and set our faucets to drip to prevent freezing. I just have to remember to do this, and I worry that I’ll forget. Do those faucet covers work? Any other options?

  • @[email protected]
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    fedilink
    211 months ago

    I believe in most houses if you turn on a couple of indoor faucets (to a slow drip) you should be OK

    I’m a plumber and I can’t think of how this would solve the issue. If you leave the outside faucet dripping then yeah but opening a faucet indoors creates no flow on the outside faucet and in no way prevents it from freezing.

    If you close the main shutoff and then open taps inside then that would lower the chances of pipes bursting due to excess pressure even if they freeze over. When the main shutoff is open the excess pressure can usually back-flow back to the grid unless you have a one-way valve there which usually is not the case especially where I live.

    The most common reason pipes burst in winter is because it freezes over somewhere and traps water between interior taps and the ice plug. Now as the freezing progresses the pressure has nowhere to go so it ruptures the pipe. This is also why they usually start leaking only after it thaws because the ice is preventing water flow to the ruptured pipe.

    • Boozilla
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      English
      111 months ago

      We had all of our pipes replaced, and I believe in my house there’s two main ‘trunks’ (upstairs and downstairs) and as long as one faucet on each level is open enough to drip, this should (in theory) relieve any freezing pressure from the whole system.

      I may have misunderstood, and the outdoor faucets are on a separate ‘trunk’. There’s the main shutoff valve in the yard owned by the county, and another one in the crawlspace owned by me.

      I certainly could have this entirely wrong, but, after what happened to my neighbor, I feel better leaving a couple of taps dripping when it gets well below freezing. Which is not very often where I live.