HoosierMark
Well-known member
Built my barn a couple of years ago and installed a 12 inch frost free hydrant thru the wall. This is the first year I left the water on over the winter. The hydrant is thru the wall into a 2x4 wall that is insulated and has plywood on both sides of it. Although barn is not heated the lowest i have seen it get is 38 degrees. Came out a couple of days ago and water was running out of the faucet. I could not shut it off. I took it all apart and found the plastic shut off was broken 11 inches in the wall. It is plastic and a piece broke off. I replaced it and everything is good. What i am trying to figure out is what I need to change so it does not happen again. Do I need to angle the pipe down so water can run out when it is shut off? Do I need to insulate it better or ? I also thought of opening the wall and letting it be exposed to the inside room via an air vent cover. I assume the 5 degree cold weather caused the water to freeze so how do I prevent it in the future? I thought frost free would protect me and 12 inches was plenty far back in the wall to be safe. Apparently the cold just traveled in and froze a few drops of water to crack the plastic valve.
What confuses me is what keeps the pipe from being the conduit of cold from outside to the inside valve. The water supply is from a pex line.
What confuses me is what keeps the pipe from being the conduit of cold from outside to the inside valve. The water supply is from a pex line.
