sgorny: (Default)
sgorny (qafhappy) ([personal profile] sgorny) wrote2008-07-04 11:28 pm

House question...

I had a weird thing happen.

I had my outside faucets covered for a year.  I just took the covers off today, hooked up the hose, and proceeded to spray the shrubs... for about 3? 5? minutes.  Then it just... petered out, or really down to a low trickle spray.

What happened?  I went inside, listened around, no sound of running water.  Did some kind of "clot" block the pipe?  Because they *are* old, and we *have* had one leak from rusting through before.  But shouldn't I hear *something* from inside?

I don't want to have to call a plumber if I don't have to, but I don't want to irreversibly damage my house, either.

Advice?
ext_22513: (Default)

[identity profile] qafhappy.livejournal.com 2008-07-05 05:30 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks!

This morning, I decided to do a little sleuthing (since now 1) it was light, and 2) I hadn't been drinking (hey, it *was* the 4th!)

First, I undid the hose from the faucet, and proceeded to get sprayed a bit in the process. Which was good, because it showed the line was under pressure. Then I put the hose back on again, took off the nozzle, and good (but hella yella water from old pipes) flow. So I put the nozzle back on, after bashing it around a bit to see if I could shake anything lose.

Spitzley spray again. So now I know it's a blocked sprayer.

But how the heck do you unclog it? Maybe some kind of compressed air, blown in from the front? I don't know...

[identity profile] nola-nola.livejournal.com 2008-07-05 07:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Hm. It could lime or calcium build up? You can buy lime remover and try soaking it. Probably just as cheap to buy a new sprayer.