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#1
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Dirty hot water
Odd thing happened yesterday. Preceding it, I noticed the kitchen sink
faucet was leaking a little so did what I've successfully done in the past - turning each faucet on and off firmly about 50 times, which has stopped leaks in the past. I have no idea how. I mention this in case it might pertain to the next paragraph. Any way, running the kitchen sink hot water shortly thereafter, the water started running dirty. Looked like rust. I checked the bathroom, which is next to the water heater, and the hot water was clear, so it wasn't the water heater. I let it run for several minutes and it cleared up, and has remained clear since. Curious. Any guesses? TIA -- You know it's time to clean the refrigerator when something closes the door from the inside. |
#2
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Dirty hot water
On Thursday, July 30, 2015 at 1:23:55 PM UTC-4, KenK wrote:
Odd thing happened yesterday. Preceding it, I noticed the kitchen sink faucet was leaking a little so did what I've successfully done in the past - turning each faucet on and off firmly about 50 times, which has stopped leaks in the past. I have no idea how. I mention this in case it might pertain to the next paragraph. Any way, running the kitchen sink hot water shortly thereafter, the water started running dirty. Looked like rust. I checked the bathroom, which is next to the water heater, and the hot water was clear, so it wasn't the water heater. I let it run for several minutes and it cleared up, and has remained clear since. Curious. Any guesses? TIA -- You know it's time to clean the refrigerator when something closes the door from the inside. you have any galvanized water lines in your home? that faucet might have been on when some dirt got in water line from saya leak repair on the street. |
#3
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Dirty hot water
On 30 Jul 2015 17:23:51 GMT, KenK wrote:
Any way, running the kitchen sink hot water shortly thereafter, the water started running dirty. Looked like rust. I checked the bathroom, which is next to the water heater, and the hot water was clear, so it wasn't the water heater. I let it run for several minutes and it cleared up, and has remained clear since. Curious. Any guesses? How old is the WH and type of pipes in the kitchen. I did have a WH rust up when this house sat vacant for six months and little water was used. Had never seen such before but replacing the WH fixed it. My house is all PEX pipe with a manifold. |
#4
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Dirty hot water
bob haller wrote in
: On Thursday, July 30, 2015 at 1:23:55 PM UTC-4, KenK wrote: Odd thing happened yesterday. Preceding it, I noticed the kitchen sink faucet was leaking a little so did what I've successfully done in the past - turning each faucet on and off firmly about 50 times, which has stopped leaks in the past. I have no idea how. I mention this in case it might pertain to the next paragraph. Any way, running the kitchen sink hot water shortly thereafter, the water started running dirty. Looked like rust. I checked the bathroom, which is next to the water heater, and the hot water was clear, so it wasn't the water heater. I let it run for several minutes and it cleared up, and has remained clear since. Curious. Any guesses? TIA -- You know it's time to clean the refrigerator when something closes the door from the inside. you have any galvanized water lines in your home? AFAIK all copper originally with PVC repairs. I think that line is all copper. that faucet might have been on when some dirt got in water line from saya leak repair on the street. Nope, I have a well. Should have mentioned that. -- You know it's time to clean the refrigerator when something closes the door from the inside. |
#5
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Dirty hot water
Oren wrote in
: On 30 Jul 2015 17:23:51 GMT, KenK wrote: Any way, running the kitchen sink hot water shortly thereafter, the water started running dirty. Looked like rust. I checked the bathroom, which is next to the water heater, and the hot water was clear, so it wasn't the water heater. I let it run for several minutes and it cleared up, and has remained clear since. Curious. Any guesses? How old is the WH A mobile home. Too lazy to look it up but probably 40 or more. and type of pipes in the kitchen. Again too lazy to go look - probably copper - if not, PVC. I did have a WH rust up when this house sat vacant for six months and little water was used. Had never seen such before but replacing the WH fixed it. My house is all PEX pipe with a manifold. Hot water gets used at least twice a day in kitchen to do dishes. -- You know it's time to clean the refrigerator when something closes the door from the inside. |
#6
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Dirty hot water
Ed Pawlowski wrote in
: On 7/30/2015 1:23 PM, KenK wrote: Odd thing happened yesterday. Preceding it, I noticed the kitchen sink faucet was leaking a little so did what I've successfully done in the past - turning each faucet on and off firmly about 50 times, which has stopped leaks in the past. I have no idea how. I mention this in case it might pertain to the next paragraph. Any way, running the kitchen sink hot water shortly thereafter, the water started running dirty. Looked like rust. I checked the bathroom, which is next to the water heater, and the hot water was clear, so it wasn't the water heater. I let it run for several minutes and it cleared up, and has remained clear since. Curious. Any guesses? TIA Turning it off and on caused the water to stop abruptly and loosed up some crap that has been accumulating for a long time. That is a fairly common procedure when blowing down a steam boiler so it looses up and gets the solids floating so they can be flushed out. Ah. Sounds like a very good possibilty. Never happened before though. -- You know it's time to clean the refrigerator when something closes the door from the inside. |
#7
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Dirty hot water
On 7/30/2015 1:23 PM, KenK wrote:
Odd thing happened yesterday. Preceding it, I noticed the kitchen sink faucet was leaking a little so did what I've successfully done in the past - turning each faucet on and off firmly about 50 times, which has stopped leaks in the past. I have no idea how. I mention this in case it might pertain to the next paragraph. Any way, running the kitchen sink hot water shortly thereafter, the water started running dirty. Looked like rust. I checked the bathroom, which is next to the water heater, and the hot water was clear, so it wasn't the water heater. I let it run for several minutes and it cleared up, and has remained clear since. Curious. Any guesses? TIA Turning it off and on caused the water to stop abruptly and loosed up some crap that has been accumulating for a long time. That is a fairly common procedure when blowing down a steam boiler so it looses up and gets the solids floating so they can be flushed out. |
#8
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Dirty hot water
In alt.home.repair, on 30 Jul 2015 17:23:51 GMT, KenK
wrote: Odd thing happened yesterday. Preceding it, I noticed the kitchen sink faucet was leaking a little so did what I've successfully done in the past - turning each faucet on and off firmly about 50 times, which has stopped leaks in the past. I have no idea how. I mention this in case it might pertain to the next paragraph. Any way, running the kitchen sink hot water shortly thereafter, the water started running dirty. Looked like rust. I checked the bathroom, which is next to the water heater, and the hot water was clear, so it wasn't the water heater. I let it run for several minutes and it cleared up, and has remained clear since. Curious. Any guesses? Washer colored dirty? That means black in most cases. Your washer is falling apart? ;-) Not likely, but if the faucet starts dripping much worse, save the old washer for physical and chemical analysis! TIA |
#9
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Dirty hot water
KenK wrote:
Odd thing happened yesterday. Preceding it, I noticed the kitchen sink faucet was leaking a little so did what I've successfully done in the past - turning each faucet on and off firmly about 50 times, which has stopped leaks in the past. I have no idea how. I mention this in case it might pertain to the next paragraph. Any way, running the kitchen sink hot water shortly thereafter, the water started running dirty. Looked like rust. I checked the bathroom, which is next to the water heater, and the hot water was clear, so it wasn't the water heater. I let it run for several minutes and it cleared up, and has remained clear since. Curious. Any guesses? TIA I have seen that happen when the fire department flushes the fire hydrants. Could it be they did that recently in your neighborhood?? |
#10
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Dirty hot water
Ken wrote in :
KenK wrote: Odd thing happened yesterday. Preceding it, I noticed the kitchen sink faucet was leaking a little so did what I've successfully done in the past - turning each faucet on and off firmly about 50 times, which has stopped leaks in the past. I have no idea how. I mention this in case it might pertain to the next paragraph. Any way, running the kitchen sink hot water shortly thereafter, the water started running dirty. Looked like rust. I checked the bathroom, which is next to the water heater, and the hot water was clear, so it wasn't the water heater. I let it run for several minutes and it cleared up, and has remained clear since. Curious. Any guesses? TIA I have seen that happen when the fire department flushes the fire hydrants. Could it be they did that recently in your neighborhood?? Out in the country. No hydrants, Using well water, -- You know it's time to clean the refrigerator when something closes the door from the inside. |
#11
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Dirty hot water
On Thu, 30 Jul 2015 13:04:47 -0500, Ken wrote:
KenK wrote: Odd thing happened yesterday. Preceding it, I noticed the kitchen sink faucet was leaking a little so did what I've successfully done in the past - turning each faucet on and off firmly about 50 times, which has stopped leaks in the past. I have no idea how. I mention this in case it might pertain to the next paragraph. Any way, running the kitchen sink hot water shortly thereafter, the water started running dirty. Looked like rust. I checked the bathroom, which is next to the water heater, and the hot water was clear, so it wasn't the water heater. I let it run for several minutes and it cleared up, and has remained clear since. Curious. Any guesses? TIA I have seen that happen when the fire department flushes the fire hydrants. Could it be they did that recently in your neighborhood?? That would dirty all the water in the heater - and the bathroom sink too. I'm voting for accumulated dirt in the pipes getting jarred loose by jamming the tap closed quickly several times. |
#12
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Dirty hot water
On 30 Jul 2015 17:50:41 GMT, KenK wrote:
Too lazy to look it up You trying to out-lazy me huh? I'm the laziest white man alive. Ask my bride. |
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