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Message

Drip faucets or turn off water
Posted on 2/20/25 at 4:46 am
Posted on 2/20/25 at 4:46 am
I live 40 miles north of Atlanta. Headed to Kannapolis, NC to watch our son play baseball. Me and the wife are leaving early tomorrow morning. Lows north of Atlanta are going to be in the mid teens overnight.
Do I drip faucets Friday to Sunday or shut off the water?
No pics of the wife.
Do I drip faucets Friday to Sunday or shut off the water?
No pics of the wife.
Posted on 2/20/25 at 4:49 am to VandyBoysWhistler
Leave the heater on, drip the faucet(s) furthest from your water supply, leave cabinet doors open
This post was edited on 2/20/25 at 4:50 am
Posted on 2/20/25 at 4:51 am to LSUfan4444
I am only worried about kitchen sink and half bath as they are both on exterior walls. We are leaving the heat on and cabinets open.
Posted on 2/20/25 at 4:58 am to VandyBoysWhistler
Well then, seems like you've got it figured out then.
Posted on 2/20/25 at 5:06 am to VandyBoysWhistler
At least it’s kind of cold there. People in Louisiana drip faucets when it’s gonna be 28.
Posted on 2/20/25 at 5:10 am to VandyBoysWhistler
Just drip. I live about 10 miles south of you and do the drip.
Posted on 2/20/25 at 5:27 am to Gifman
Probably what I will do. Neighbor says he turns water off because we are on septic tanks and not sewers. I have always dripped but never while I am gone for a couple of days.
Posted on 2/20/25 at 5:31 am to VandyBoysWhistler
East Cobb doing the drip.
Had to head to BR during the last snow storm and left it dripping. I was paranoid my house would flood for reasons that made no sense. I should have been more concerned with the water bill.
Had to head to BR during the last snow storm and left it dripping. I was paranoid my house would flood for reasons that made no sense. I should have been more concerned with the water bill.
This post was edited on 2/20/25 at 5:33 am
Posted on 2/20/25 at 5:35 am to VandyBoysWhistler
Here we go again!
No grown man should have to ask this!!!
No grown man should have to ask this!!!
Posted on 2/20/25 at 5:36 am to MyRockstarComplex
Thanks Rockstar. Paranoia was getting me as well. You are probably on sewer in East Cobb. Played a lot of baseball over there.
Posted on 2/20/25 at 5:57 am to VandyBoysWhistler
Do nothing and see where your weak spots are. Have them fixed and never worry again.
Posted on 2/20/25 at 5:58 am to VandyBoysWhistler
I honestly don’t know why people drip faucets. I can see it in the 1950s but today it doesn’t seem necessary.
Unless it going to be below freezing in your house the temp will stay high enough not to worry about your pipes. I guess if you live in a raised home with exposed pipes underneath then thats a totally different story
Unless it going to be below freezing in your house the temp will stay high enough not to worry about your pipes. I guess if you live in a raised home with exposed pipes underneath then thats a totally different story
This post was edited on 2/20/25 at 5:59 am
Posted on 2/20/25 at 6:01 am to Tenfold
quote:
I honestly don’t know why people drip faucets. I can see it in the 1950s but today it doesn’t seem necessary. Unless it going to be below freezing in your house the temp will stay high enough not to worry about your pipes. I guess unless you live in a raised home with exposed pipes.
Well a shite ton of people live in pier and beam houses, Einstein. What does the year have to do with anything unless you’ve retrofitted an older home with plex plumbing?
Posted on 2/20/25 at 6:04 am to VandyBoysWhistler
quote:
Neighbor says he turns water off because we are on septic tanks and not sewers.
Dripping for a few days will have zero effect on a septic tank/field unless it’s actually a Lowe’s bucket down by the river. (ETA: You aren’t there using the drains anyway so it’ll be a lot less than your usual strain on the system. Unless a dyspeptic squatter moves in. Then you have bigger problems.)
This post was edited on 2/20/25 at 6:07 am
Posted on 2/20/25 at 6:10 am to Tenfold
quote:
Unless it going to be below freezing in your house the temp will stay high enough not to worry about your pipes.
Two winters in a row in our Montana house we had the same bathtub pipes freeze despite us being in the house with the heater blasting and dripping the bathroom sink (and the kitchen sink which is last in line). Pipes are on outside wall of an old house. They didn’t burst but it took some effort to thaw them. I’ve since added insulation and keep the access door open in the winter and drip the tub.
Posted on 2/20/25 at 6:12 am to Tenfold
quote:I live in Central (La suburb city of BR), house on piers. I drip sinks in bathroom and kitchen.
I honestly don’t know why people drip faucets. I can see it in the 1950s but today it doesn’t seem necessary.
Unless it going to be below freezing in your house the temp will stay high enough not to worry about your pipes
I know someone a couple miles away, house on a slab. She dripped, but there was an outside faucet connected to the same line as her kitchen sink. In the last freeze, that outside line froze, and burst the pipes in her wall. They had to cut away an interior section of the wall to get to it. Ended up just capping off the outside line there.
To heck with the water bill, I think mine was $10 more for the month. I don't want to deal with busted pipes.
Posted on 2/20/25 at 6:54 am to VandyBoysWhistler
Drip both hot and cold at a few distant faucets, turn your water heater off if you can,leave the house heat on, open cabinet doors under sinks and put washing machine and dishwasher on delay start
Problem with turning water off is that you still have water trapped in the lines and could freeze and burst
Problem with turning water off is that you still have water trapped in the lines and could freeze and burst
Posted on 2/20/25 at 6:56 am to The Boat
quote:
At least it’s kind of cold there. People in Louisiana drip faucets when it’s gonna be 28.
They don’t build raised homes with pipes exposed in north Atlanta suburbs.
Derp
And over the years I’ve had pipes burst from freezing twice in Louisiana. Happened zero times in GA.
Also happened zero times when I lived in Tampa, but it never got below freezing when I lived there.
This post was edited on 2/20/25 at 7:11 am
Posted on 2/20/25 at 6:58 am to VandyBoysWhistler
My FIL shut off the water during the snow this year and that turned out to be a mistake. He was without water for a day.
We dripped our furthest faucet, we never were without.
Just drip the faucet.
We dripped our furthest faucet, we never were without.
Just drip the faucet.
Posted on 2/20/25 at 7:08 am to Odysseus32
I usually drip at 25 or below on furthest faucets. Below that I’ll open cabinets and drip a few more.
In the 20 or 21 freeze we lost power for 5 days. I shut the water off and went to a hotel and had no problems once we got power back.
In the 20 or 21 freeze we lost power for 5 days. I shut the water off and went to a hotel and had no problems once we got power back.
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