What I am trying to avoid here is the plumber showing up, turning some knobs, running the water and hitting me with a service call charge. It starts at like $600 IIRC. And coming up with some BS excuse as to why my fixture catridges are causing the problem.
There are three knobs on the panel.
Top = diverter: Options Shower head, body sprayer, or hand wand
Middle = volume control
Bottom = Thermostat. Set at preferred temperature.
Maybe its a problem similar to what
@DGersic experienced??? I believe you shut down the volume control and the water stops flowing. I can't wrap head around how that would impact 2 sinks. And happening within specific time windows.
Shower Panel link.
**edit** - Maybe what you guys are saying about debris from construction messing up the shower cartridge is what's happening. How could I test that myself?
Your shower panel should not be the cause, but it could be. Is that built in? Or added on later?
What Dad had was something like this:
The shower has two separate taps, for cold and hot. Dedicated shower, 1968 style. You get in, turn the knobs to get water flowing from the shower head, adjust temperature as needed. Was working fine.
Mom and Dad were getting old, and no longer felt safe standing in a shower. They added a shower chair, and a cheap wand. The kind that just replaces the shower head. That also worked fine. You got in, turned on the taps, and adjusted the knobs to desired temperature.
The problem started when Mom discovered that the wand had a shut off valve on it. Unbeknownst to Dad, she started leaving the taps on, so she wouldn’t have to adjust them to desired temperature. This wasn’t how the shower was designed to work, the in-wall plumbing allowed hot to cross over in to cold, and suddenly the sinks ran hot from both taps.
He spent quite a while trying to figure out where the crossover was happening. The biggest obstacle was that Mom had made a change that he wasn’t aware of, so didn’t think to look for.
Going back to turning the taps off resolved his problem.
Yours, I dunno. You have some kind of fancy diverter / mixer / valves panel thing there. It should (?) be designed to prevent crossover. It should be preventing crossover. But it seems possible that it has failed in some way.
Or, you’re in some kind of shared plumbing system here. It’s possible that one of your neighbors has something that is allowing crossover. Do all of your neighbors have this same shower panel? Were they all installed when the plumbing system was designed and built, or added on later as an upgrade?
Without understanding what you have and how it’s supposed to work, all I can do is speculate.
The only way I can see figuring this out requires checking everything connected to both hot and cold. Every sink, shower, has to be suspect. Depending on how the system is designed, it may be possible to isolate parts of it to narrow down where it could be.