Search the forum,

Discuss Outside tap mystery in the USA area at PlumbersForums.net

Dg8

Messages
15
Hi all, I'm completely confused by my outside tap.
If I open it quarter of a turn, I get high pressure (as expected) but also high flow (I can fill a saucepan in about 5 seconds). If I continue to turn the tap, the flow suddenly slows to the point it takes about 25 seconds to fill the same saucepan. I assumed it must be a dodgy tap, so changed it, but the new one acts in the same way. If I unscrew the tap and turn the stopcock on, water just pours out of the back plate hole without any apparent pressure.
I don't think I have a pressure reducing valve on my feed to this tap, and no other cold water taps act this way.
Does anyone have any ideas? I will have to call the plumber out if it's not a simple fix, as I think I've already burnt out my pressure washer having that tap fully open and assuming it was getting a good flow.
Thanks very much in advance.
 
If you leave the outside tap cracked open so that you get good flow and pressure, does it last or start to drop off?
 
If you leave the outside tap cracked open so that you get good flow and pressure, does it last or start to drop off?
I've not tried it over a longer period of time, only seen for a couple of minutes, the water seems to just pour out rather than have any pressure behind it. It's weird, it's like something detects when there's no resistance (like a partially opened tap) and kills the pressure and flow. I just can't think what would cause this effect. If the tap has a quarter turn, the water comes out like the clappers, any more, and there's almost a 'clunk' sensation I feel on the tap and it just pours out in a rather lackluster fashion
 
If you leave the outside tap cracked open so that you get good flow and pressure, does it last or start to drop off?
Just reread your question. It seems to maintain flow. If it's been off for a few minutes and you turn it straight to fully open pressure drops immediately. So I don't think it's building pressure in the pipe.
One possibility I suppose, is that there's some obstruction in the pipe the only moves to block when the pressure is high enough (fully open), at a quarter cracked it's good pressure but not sufficient to block the pipe? No idea how I'd confirm this or rectify it as all the pipework is hidden within the internal walls (fairly new build property).
 
Does anyone have any ideas?
Most likely a lump of something rolling around in the pipe somewhere.

There are things called 'excess flow valves' (and about a dozen other names) that are designed to detect burst pipes and shutoff when the flow exceeds a set maximum rate, or more than a certain volume in a certain time. Not something I'd expect to see on a new build house but worth looking for.
 

Reply to Outside tap mystery in the USA area at PlumbersForums.net

Similar plumbing topics

Hi all I'm hoping someone can shine a light on this for me Since our stop tap on the pavement has now been filled with sand for whatever reason, we are relying on our property fitted stopcock (this is outside on our garage wall) Unfortunately turning this to the closed position only reduces...
Replies
3
Views
244
Hello all, I'm would like to extend an existing outside tap to another point in the garden. I'm about to pour a concrete patio and was hoping to run the water line underneath. There are existing drain (and who knows what) pipes running along the same wall so I'm nervous about digging too far...
Replies
6
Views
227
Hi, Can anyone advise as to why the cold water to my bathroom keeps airlocking? This originally happened about 12 months ago and has happened 3-4 times since. It’s an upstairs bathroom, fed from a tank in the attic. The tank is about 8 Meters away and feeds a bath, sink and toilet. The tank...
Replies
9
Views
323
Hi, basic question, any insight much appreciated. Looking to have an outdoor tap in my front porch fed from 15mm pex coming up from suspended floor. Pic 1 is inside porch, pex temporarily clipped to give an idea of pipe placement (ignore shoddy blockwork of booted cowboy builder!), Pic 2 is...
Replies
6
Views
226
Hello all, I’m replacing a concrete paving slab patio in the back yard. The original patio used 50mm deep concrete slabs on hardcore & sand. I’m planning to pour a 100mm deep concrete patio on 100mm hardcore. In order to achieve the same final height to line up with the rest of the patio, I...
Replies
6
Views
232
Creating content since 2001. Untold Media.

Newest Plumbing Threads

Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock