ᐅ Frost protection / electric heating for outdoor faucet (garden tap / spigot)
Created on: 19 Oct 2024 16:24
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_marlon_Hello everyone,
We are currently in the building process. Our property does not yet have a water connection. However, a neighbor has kindly allowed us to use their outdoor faucet in the garden. The outdoor faucet is installed directly through the building wall.
With the upcoming winter, we now need a solution for temperatures below freezing to ensure that the outdoor faucet and the pipes inside the wall are protected from damage caused by ice formation. I couldn’t find a suitable solution online, and the local hardware store couldn’t help either. Does anyone here know of a reliable way to protect an outdoor faucet from frost without having to shut it off completely?
Thank you very much for your help and best regards
We are currently in the building process. Our property does not yet have a water connection. However, a neighbor has kindly allowed us to use their outdoor faucet in the garden. The outdoor faucet is installed directly through the building wall.
With the upcoming winter, we now need a solution for temperatures below freezing to ensure that the outdoor faucet and the pipes inside the wall are protected from damage caused by ice formation. I couldn’t find a suitable solution online, and the local hardware store couldn’t help either. Does anyone here know of a reliable way to protect an outdoor faucet from frost without having to shut it off completely?
Thank you very much for your help and best regards
H
hanghaus202319 Oct 2024 17:12The only solution is to let the water run. When no water is needed, turn it off, remove the hose, and store it in a warm place. No one works during frost anyway.
Hey, thanks for the quick response.
When not in use, the garden hose should also be drained. However, the hope is that the outdoor water tap doesn’t have to be completely shut off, since we would have to go into the neighbor’s basement every time.
If there is a way to avoid that, we would prefer to insulate the outdoor faucet from the outside and heat it electrically. Unfortunately, I haven’t found a suitable solution for this so far.
When not in use, the garden hose should also be drained. However, the hope is that the outdoor water tap doesn’t have to be completely shut off, since we would have to go into the neighbor’s basement every time.
If there is a way to avoid that, we would prefer to insulate the outdoor faucet from the outside and heat it electrically. Unfortunately, I haven’t found a suitable solution for this so far.
You can build a small polystyrene box (or buy one ready-made, for example, an insulated food container or similar) and install a heating cable with a temperature sensor inside – look for roof gutter heating or pipe trace heating, as there are many ready-made solutions available for this.
H
hanghaus202320 Oct 2024 15:52_marlon_ schrieb:
When not in use, the water hose should also be drained. The hope is that the outdoor faucet won’t need to be completely shut off, as that would require going down to the neighbor’s basement each time.
An outdoor faucet drains itself automatically. That’s why the hose should be removed. There’s no need to go to the basement.Similar topics