Thank you! My 1980's spigot has a female outlet with very fine threads. I'm having trouble finding one that fits it. The old one got completely corroded and leaky.
Thank you for the information. The faucets in my house have built-in vacuum breakers. They began to leak from under the cap. I've already replaced them three times and they still start leaking again every few days. What could be the reason? Perhaps the entire faucet needs to be replaced?
In my city, the city came through the neighborhood and installed them on all the houses within a couple of months, they were all removed. it wasn't mentioned in our home inspection even though they were not installed.
I do not see a link to the other video removing that lock screw. I looked at the list of other videos but could not find it. Where is it? Using a Dremel with a thin blade might work to.
Hoping someone can answer this. I'm a home inspector and I never pass up the opportunity to learn something new. I have always avoided hose bibs with vacuum breakers when I wanted to test the home's water pressure because it seemed to me that it would give a falsely high water pressure reading. I wasn't sure so I just test elsewhere. But now I'm at the point where I really would like the answer to that if someone could tell me. Does a vacuum breaker affect the water pressure reading if you attach the water pressure meter to a hose bib that has one?
It’s a common practice In Canada that you pay for a home inspector when you buy a house. If everything is ok you buy it. Trust my own inspector, not the seller’s inspector. It’s only few hundred bucks.
Probably required because people have hooked up their hoses to some ant killer canister, left pressure in the hose, and then it back flowed into their home when their well pressure fell below the hose pressure.
I installed a vacuum breaker to replace the ones that came with the house due to leaking and the new one makes the pipes hum and it's extremely loud in the house. No idea why but I'm just going to remove them for now
I need 2 vacuum breakers that are a bit larger than usual. Male thread diameter on the faucet is 1 3/16" OD. (1.1875) Any ideas on a source for that? Thanks much.
Thanks for the informational video. Now I know I got ripped off. Paid a plumber to install one at $300. My city (Pasadena, CA ) inspector made my restaurant install one of those vacuum breakers on my sink chemical dispenser.
You didn't not get ripped off. He was going over a home exterior faucet. Requirements, regulations, and the equipment to comply with them are vastly different for public and private homeowner use.
You didn't get ripped off, you paid a plumber to do a job. You agreed to his price and he did the job. The only person you have to be mad at is yourself for not doing your do diligence and looking into the project. Contractors are in business to make money, not give you a deal. Also, you're paying a seasoned experienced plumber who is probably capable of far more difficult and complex jobs. Just because the job is simple doesn't mean his experience and knowledge and time is any less valuable. Whether a doctor is applying a bandaid to a paper cut or performing surgery, he is still going to bill you according to his hourly rate. You aren't paying for the bandaid, you're paying for his 20 years of education and experience.
I'm a home inspector but I hate that inspections are required in some areas. People should be able to make a choice if they want to pay for that. It theoretically makes me money but I think it's wrong in a free country. They are requiring sellers in PA to get sewer lateral inspections, chimney inspections, as well as U&O inspections prior to sale. Thats just nuts to me. Too much government involved in private transactions. Ok, I'm done with my rant. Thanks for the videos Reuben!
I completely agree if it's a private sale with cash. But when a bank and a mortgage is involved you can't really blame the bank for wanting to know that the collateral is in good condition and up to code.
I used to do crawl space moister inspections and wood destroying organisms. In my area If the bank was loaning it then they required it not the law. Cash buyers can do whatever. Is it really forced in areas by the government? (Even tho the banks and government are pretty much the same)
Hard disagree in this current market- because it's so hot, people wave inspections and if you want an offer accepted, you don't have a choice- you have to forfeit it as well. So it can go in the other direction as well.
5 Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength. 6 These commandments that I give you today are to be on your hearts. 7 Impress them on your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up.
Ok so I understand what it does but why would I need one? If by some strange chance contaminated water came back up my hose into the spigot wouldn't it just sit in that pipe until the next time I use the hose? It's not like it's going to circulate through out the whole house. I'm confused. Maybe I'm missing something but these things seem like something you would never need. They were on the exterior hose spigots when I bought my house but I have since removed them because I didn't know what they were. Now I know what they are but I really don't see a need for them. Can anyone with some knowledge on these things please let me know why I would need them?
I removed mine and put adapters in place because my bibs had a fine thread for the breakers and I needed the 3/4 coarse thread for hose fittings. Haven’t leaked since