Joe Nonety
Registered User
- Messages
- 418
Turning off the water at the mains can be pretty pointless unless you drain all your tanks and pipes as well....
- No central heating or hot water to come on and turn off water at mains.
- ???
Learned the expensive way last year. I'm setting the heat on for 4 X 45 minute bursts throughtout the day/night
We got a call from the neigbours of a house we own, earlier today to be told that the smoke alarm was going off and when they looked in the letter box they could hear water running. So we had a burst pipe so it does happen. As it was a middle house in a row of town houses we felt it would be ok but unfortunatly not. I am also a little worried about insurance as it is a house we have rented out and the tennents left 2 weks ago so it was unoccupied. I am not sure if this creates an issue. What things do we need to do to start the dry out proccess . It is not a great way to spend my few days off over Christmas. We will not be able to contact insurance co until Tuesday so should we do much mopping up or what. Any other tips greatly neededdid a pipe inside burst from frezzing? That would be rare enough.
You can shut off mains outside and open outside tap or kitchen tap to drain.
I would time my heating to come on for an hour at around 6am and around midnight, not because I would be afraid of frezzing, but to keep the house from needing a big warm up on return.
Personally I would not leave the boiler unattended. My boiler (oil) just failed when the thermostat failed to shut it off and for some reason the emergency thermostat did not work either. The result was it started to boil, if I was not at home and able to shut it off, I don’t know what the outcome would have been.
In a well built house the pipes should be well lagged which is a great deterrent from frozen pipes I notice where I live some houses suffered a loss of water coming in from the mains due to frozen pipes.
When the freezing is relentless for a week, you've got to work out if the trickle will freeze in the outlet, blocking it, filling the sink and eventually pouring over. Unlikely but possible.That was my experience over Christmas - water froze in the outdoor pipes and I had to wait until the temps rose enough to defrost them (day and a half later). One tip I was given to help minimise the likelihood of outdoor freezing is to keep the water flowing by leaving a tap on (not full blast, a trickle should do).
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