โFeb-01-2018 07:51 AM
โFeb-03-2018 04:35 PM
Gritdog wrote:Me too! And I rebuilt this old house.
In the meantime I have insurance. Just hope it floods the whole house so that the first repair activity involves an excavator!
โFeb-03-2018 04:15 PM
I donโt think thereโs anything wrong with turning your water off. Those valves usually have loops so they can be locked OFF if you donโt pay. An adjustable wrench should work. The special tool they use is to avoid kneeling and reaching into the cobwebs.This assumes a main water shut off valve close to the residence. In my area, the mains valve to the house is inside a metal sleeve and the valve is 6' under grade in the sleeve. To turn the mains valve off at the curb, a long handled wrench is needed (curb key). I built one once and IIRC, the size is 1 1/2" square. The City owns the valve and only a licensed water mains guy or a City worker is supposed to operate it. I do know that irrigation crews commonly have and use them.
โFeb-03-2018 12:02 PM
โFeb-03-2018 10:39 AM
โFeb-03-2018 09:16 AM
ljr wrote:Farmboy666 wrote:ljr wrote:
A couple years ago I left the house for the winter with the water off at the valve and the pipes drained. The furnace quit in Feb. The house valve froze and ruptured. I returned to find 28,000 gallons of water in my finished basement.
I now have the township turn the water off at the curb. That involves a fee and some hassle but itโs well worth it.
Do you need to have them turn it off? All of the ones I've ever delt with youc can turn of with a Cresent wrench or water meter key from HD
They have an odd looking tool but I expect I could find away if I tried. On the other hand, the bureaucracies donโt tolerate insubordination from their subjects. I expect theyโd find a way to punish me.
โFeb-03-2018 08:59 AM
Farmboy666 wrote:ljr wrote:
A couple years ago I left the house for the winter with the water off at the valve and the pipes drained. The furnace quit in Feb. The house valve froze and ruptured. I returned to find 28,000 gallons of water in my finished basement.
I now have the township turn the water off at the curb. That involves a fee and some hassle but itโs well worth it.
Do you need to have them turn it off? All of the ones I've ever delt with youc can turn of with a Cresent wrench or water meter key from HD
โFeb-02-2018 02:28 PM
Grit dog wrote:
In the meantime I have insurance. Just hope it floods the whole house so that the first repair activity involves an excavator!
โFeb-02-2018 01:39 PM
โFeb-02-2018 01:35 PM
spoon059 wrote:fj12ryder wrote:spoon059 wrote:You must not get out much. Or belong to many internet forums. RV.net is remarkably well behaved. Maybe even more so without sniping such as yours. ๐
Only on RV.net can this turn into a bitter and personal attack on various ways people chose to protect their houses. You guys are truly remarkable...
Case in point...
โFeb-02-2018 12:37 PM
2oldman wrote:
Nice insult, but I certainly wouldn't expect or trust any friend to look in on my home every day, as you are implying. There are many tools at our disposal to handle this, humans being one, but not the only one.
โFeb-02-2018 12:30 PM
fj12ryder wrote:spoon059 wrote:You must not get out much. Or belong to many internet forums. RV.net is remarkably well behaved. Maybe even more so without sniping such as yours. ๐
Only on RV.net can this turn into a bitter and personal attack on various ways people chose to protect their houses. You guys are truly remarkable...
โFeb-02-2018 12:23 PM
โFeb-02-2018 11:47 AM
spoon059 wrote:You must not get out much. Or belong to many internet forums. RV.net is remarkably well behaved. Maybe even more so without sniping such as yours. ๐
Only on RV.net can this turn into a bitter and personal attack on various ways people chose to protect their houses. You guys are truly remarkable...
โFeb-02-2018 11:27 AM