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The last 10 posts

Saturday, July 16th 2011, 8:59pm

by Wet_Boots

I should be more precise about meter access - water companies don't cut away wood or drywall. They just arrange matters so that the homeowner gets it done, because that is so very much preferable to what can happen when the wheels of bureaucracy start turning.

Friday, July 15th 2011, 1:44pm

by brisk

Thanks for reminding me Texas Chainsaw Massacre, a really SCARY movie! :-)

Frankly, the drywall concerns fall into the "tough noogies" file, because water meter access is not yours to impede. If the water company wants to switch meters, they get to do so even at the cost (all yours) of a Texas Chainsaw Massacre on your finished basement. Consider modifications to allow easy swapping of meters.

Friday, July 15th 2011, 11:09am

by Wet_Boots

Frankly, the drywall concerns fall into the "tough noogies" file, because water meter access is not yours to impede. If the water company wants to switch meters, they get to do so even at the cost (all yours) of a Texas Chainsaw Massacre on your finished basement. Consider modifications to allow easy swapping of meters.

Friday, July 15th 2011, 9:26am

by brisk

Thanks Mitchgo/Wet_boots.

I will try to reproduce it as soon as I get home.
Now I feel better because:

1: you are telling me that not to worry about it, and it won't break the pipe
2: my neighbor has the exact same noise, and he has had his system for 10+ years.

If the water meter is not going to break, I really don't want to replace the meter, because my basement is finished, in order to reach the meter, I have demolish a piece of drywall and patch it back, paint it again, too much work!

But thanks for all the good suggestions!
Try reproducing this by turning on all your hose bibs-- it may not be as apparent because the hose bibs usually create a lot of noise.

Thursday, July 14th 2011, 11:36pm

by Mitchgo

Try reproducing this by turning on all your hose bibs-- it may not be as apparent because the hose bibs usually create a lot of noise.

Thursday, July 14th 2011, 11:32pm

by Mitchgo

After watching the video and not reading boots posts before - My thought exactly was a loud ass water meter echoing through your pipe.. That doesn't really sound like banging- sounds like the water meter gears

I would see if you could get your meter replaced.

I can't explain why you are not hearing at exactly at the meter- my guess the sound is echoing through the pipe

Thursday, July 14th 2011, 6:49pm

by Wet_Boots

Trust me - non-banging is a non-issue. If the pipe is not in any way loose, then what the hey where you believe the noise is coming from. (especially since we aren't seeing a view of it) Get a stethoscope if you need a hobby listening to pipe noises.

Thursday, July 14th 2011, 4:18pm

by brisk

Ah.... so this is a non-issue and I can just ignore it? Is this the water meter? see pic below:


If it is water meter, why I don't hear the noise from it, instead the noise is about 3-4 feet above it?

Sorry, I have too many questions!

thanks
That is definitely not banging. You just have a noisy water meter. You may find that your water purveyor doesn't care if the noise bugs you or not. But you might wheedle a meter replacement from them, but don't expect it to make a great difference.

If you had real pip
e banging you would run for cover - it is that far beyond what you have. 8|

Thursday, July 14th 2011, 2:40pm

by Wet_Boots

That is definitely not banging. You just have a noisy water meter. You may find that your water purveyor doesn't care if the noise bugs you or not. But you might wheedle a meter replacement from them, but don't expect it to make a great difference.

If you had real pipe banging you would run for cover - it is that far beyond what you have. 8|

Thursday, July 14th 2011, 1:52pm

by brisk

Thanks Wet Boots.

yes, I am going to check if I can just replace the bonnet of the 100G with 101G.

I also uploaded a video, can you please let me is this is what you think it is?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0GPSKi4v0c

thanks
You can't reproduce the effect in your home, because there isn't a diaphragm valve maxing out the supply. Get to work on the given solutions and stop asking questions. :evil: