I am considering installing a safety valve in the water supply line of a house connection.
It should automatically shut off in case of major issues, provide warnings for minor problems, and allow consumption monitoring on a computer.
The property is a semi-detached house, approximately 25 years old. The photo shows the installation in the utility room. The distances between the individual fittings in the main water line are relatively tight, so any additional device must require very little space.
The small-diameter water line runs outside the house for garden irrigation.

It should automatically shut off in case of major issues, provide warnings for minor problems, and allow consumption monitoring on a computer.
The property is a semi-detached house, approximately 25 years old. The photo shows the installation in the utility room. The distances between the individual fittings in the main water line are relatively tight, so any additional device must require very little space.
The small-diameter water line runs outside the house for garden irrigation.
K
Knallkörper10 Jan 2018 13:13I have a leak detector in my utility room that shuts off a solenoid valve in the water line.
Knallkörper schrieb:
I have a leak sensor installed in my utility room that closes a solenoid valve in the water supply line. Thanks for the tip!
In this case, I’m not concerned with monitoring individual rooms, but the entire water installation.
For this purpose, the flow should be monitored at the main water inlet. Software could then analyze irregularities or a constant small flow, display them graphically, and potentially close a valve at the main water inlet.
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