Repairing a Frozen
Pipe By: Mark J
Donovan
In just a matter of a months winter will be
upon us. Besides bundling up from the cold and shoveling snow,
homeowners sometimes have to deal with the additional task of
fixing frozen pipes.
Prevention is the Best
Medicine
The best way to deal with frozen pipes is to
prevent them in the first place. If you have the luxury of
participating and/or overseeing the building of your home, make
sure the plumber does not run any plumbing supply lines in the
outside walls of the home. Even if he indicates he will wrap
them in insulation, do not accept this compromise. I have seen
even insulated pipes in outside walls freeze.
If, however, you have an existing home and
there are plumbing supply lines running on the outside walls
that you have access to, then insulate these pipes with pipe
insulation. It is better than nothing.
How to Fix a Frozen Pipe
If in the event you do find yourself with a
frozen pipe, then I recommend the following:
?
Close the supply line valve and open the faucet at the end of
the pipe.
?
Examine the entire length of pipe looking for cracks, breaks or
holes, particularly focusing on the suspect cold areas, e.g.
crawl spaces and outside walls.
Thaw Out the Damaged Pipe
?
Once the crack, break or hole has been identified, use a hair
dryer to heat up the surrounding pipe area to get the water
flowing again through the pipe. Check the faucet regularly to
see when the water begins to flow again. Once the water begins
to flow it is time to move on to the repairing
phase.
Note: The amount of water flowing out of the
faucet will be limited as the supply line valve was shut
off.
Repairing the Damage Supply
Line
?
Once the damaged pipe area has been thawed out, using a hack
saw or pipe cutter, remove a section of pipe that includes the
broken section.
?
Replace this section of pipe. Use a propane torch, solder and
flux to sweat the new joints.
?
If you are not comfortable cutting and replacing the damaged
pipe, pending the size of the crack or break you could simply
wrap duct tape or electrical tape around the affected area for
a temporary fix. However, a plumber should be brought in as
soon as possible to fix the leak permanently.
?
Once the pipe has been repaired, turn the supply line valve
back on, run the faucet and check the repaired site for any
leaks.
?
Finally, apply some pipe insulation and/or electrical
pipe-heating wire around the repaired area to prevent the
problem from occurring again.
|
About
The Author
Over
the past 20+ years Mark Donovan has been
involved with building homes and
additions to homes. His projects have
included: building a vacation home,
building additions and garages on to
existing homes, and finishing unfinished
homes. For more home improvement
information visit http://www.homeadditionplus.com
and
http://www.homeaddition.blogspot.com
.
|
|