water pressu hammer/reducing valve?
Hello,
I have some water hammer caused by the washing machine and dishwasher. Should I get some of those arrestors and fit one by each appliance? I measured the water pressure and it is 4 bar. I'm sure I read here that it is useful to have a pressure reducing valve set to reduce incoming pressure to 3 bar. Is that right? Would that be a better idea? Thanks, Stephen. |
water pressu hammer/reducing valve?
Stephen wrote:
Hello, I have some water hammer caused by the washing machine and dishwasher. Should I get some of those arrestors and fit one by each appliance? I measured the water pressure and it is 4 bar. I'm sure I read here that it is useful to have a pressure reducing valve set to reduce incoming pressure to 3 bar. Is that right? Would that be a better idea? Thanks, Stephen. Before reducing you pressure have a dig around you CW system for any €śdead legs€ť that might have become air filled. These can be a potent cause of mains water hammers. Tim -- Please don't feed the trolls |
water pressu hammer/reducing valve?
Tim+ laid this down on his screen :
Before reducing you pressure have a dig around you CW system for any €śdead legs€ť that might have become air filled. These can be a potent cause of mains water hammers. Actually I would have expected the opposite - the bubble of air would help buffer the the sudden surge in pressure, when a valve shuts suddenly and the rushing water has nowhere to go.. Which is what causes the hammering noise. |
water pressu hammer/reducing valve?
Jethro_uk wrote in
: On Mon, 18 Feb 2019 10:57:00 +0000, Stephen wrote: Hello, I have some water hammer caused by the washing machine and dishwasher. Should I get some of those arrestors and fit one by each appliance? I measured the water pressure and it is 4 bar. I'm sure I read here that it is useful to have a pressure reducing valve set to reduce incoming pressure to 3 bar. Is that right? Would that be a better idea? Thanks, Stephen. Fit an isolator and half-turn it ? When I redid all our plumbing I fitted isolators as a matter of course anyway. They can be noisy though. Sometimes hammer can be due the the filler hose being too elastic. |
water pressu hammer/reducing valve?
On Mon, 18 Feb 2019 15:13:43 -0000, "Brian Gaff"
wrote: Also some pipes that have dips in their runs or where the clips have failed. Its amazing how much racket just a tiny vibration can cause I'm sure unsupported or insufficiently supported pipe work is the cause but it was fitted by a previous owner and is behind the kitchen units and under floorboards, so I cannot do anything about it until I have a major redecoration. Thanks, Stephen. |
water pressu hammer/reducing valve?
On Mon, 18 Feb 2019 13:01:39 GMT, DerbyBorn
wrote: Fit an isolator and half-turn it ? When I redid all our plumbing I fitted isolators as a matter of course anyway. They can be noisy though. Sometimes hammer can be due the the filler hose being too elastic. Yes, I've heard that throttling the isolator can cause the flow to be more noisy. I think the problem is that with washing machines and dishwashers, the valve is either open or closed, so it is quite harsh in it's operation; there's no gentle opening or closing of the valve, like you do with a tap. Thanks, Stephen. |
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