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Texas freeze

Gigem

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 2, 2011
Messages
410
Location
Lakeway, Texas on beautiful Lake Travis
Been fighting the cold all week. Cold won this morning at 4 am. Excuse my **** demo work, I was not in a good mood.

Just capped for now. Costs me a hose bibb for a while. No biggie. Will fix for real before sheetrock.

Will do more demo tomorrow, still some wet rock and insulation. If my attitude is better.5dea6f1745ca9dc3ae1ee0333ff10abe.jpgd2998ada347619a8cb41f94b7d54ebd4.jpg334c4ff926bde4fbef25880a0ffa48e3.jpg

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dcs13

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 19, 2006
Messages
161
Location
The Hill Country ,Texas
Oh, that *****. Its been a tough road. Ive been fighting for 6 days to keep my stuff from freezing. Praying for another 48 hours til we get above freezing... I will certainly evaluate my emergency plans after this.. I'm gonna squeek through
 

Wheelingit

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 28, 2020
Messages
330
Location
Maryland USA
I feel really sorry for all of you with the extreme cold. We get that around my way but we are more insulated and better prepared than the warmer states. Hard to believe you are experiencing such low temps.
 

niget2002

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 2, 2012
Messages
11,121
Location
Josephine, TX
I have my fingers crossed. Our house has pex. We've had a few frozen lines, but a space heater in the room with the door closed and faucets open have opened them back up. I have no idea if my outdoor faucets have survived or the pipes in the shop. I've gone and checked on the shop a few times and haven't found water on anything, but they could all still be frozen.

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Jlbc212

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 7, 2013
Messages
1,530
Location
Northeast MA
Often damage to piping caused by freezing doesn't show up until the ice begins to melt. Having to deal with burst pipes really does ****. In my former career as a firefighter I often had no choice other than to completely shut down housing and displace families because the water damaged electrical and heating systems. Our local Red Cross chapter was frequently taxed to the max attempting to find temporary housing for families.
 

bigdav160

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 14, 2007
Messages
2,027
Location
Deep in the heart of Texas
Going to go look at one of my rentals today. 72+ hours without electricity and freezing conditions. Occupants couldn't figure out how to turn the water off and had to get a neighbor to do it.
 

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DeeKay

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Joined
Nov 25, 2020
Messages
448
Location
Colorado
Man that really *****, hang in there!
I hate when I hear people up here talking sh*t saying all the people and power companies in Texas should have been better prepared for this. So stupid, that's like saying someone in Iowa should be prepared for Hurricane season.
 

PWC Repair

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 27, 2012
Messages
3,167
Location
Arkansas
I also feel for you guys. Several years back we had an ice storm that left pretty much everybody in Northern Arkansas without power. We didn't have any backup at the time.....had to stay with my sis-in-law for 9 days. Luckily, my outdoor hose bib sits lower than my whole house. I was able to open it up and open all the faucets and siphon drain the house. Didn't have any fixing to do. My bro-in-law had multiple busted water lines under his mobile home, as did thousands of others around here. What a SHi**y mess!
 

Hobby_Man22

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 16, 2020
Messages
3,581
Location
tx
I have a customer that preaches everytime we have a hurricane we get freezing weather and so far she's been right. Never got a direct hit but I guess Louisiana was close enough. Although it came kind of late this year.
 

finn

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 27, 2005
Messages
16,190
Location
The UP, God's country
Man that really *****, hang in there!
I hate when I hear people up here talking sh*t saying all the people and power companies in Texas should have been better prepared for this. So stupid, that's like saying someone in Iowa should be prepared for Hurricane season.

History shows this happens, to some extent, every ten or so years. It’s more severe this time, but not unheard of.

Iowa gets tornadoes, not hurricanes, and there are emergency plans in place.
 

DeeKay

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 25, 2020
Messages
448
Location
Colorado
History shows this happens, to some extent, every ten or so years. It’s more severe this time, but not unheard of.

Iowa gets tornadoes, not hurricanes, and there are emergency plans in place.

I think you made my point; Tornados are common in Iowa therefore there are procedures to deal with them. Maybe a Hurricane in Iowa isn't a great example because it's an impossibility, but you get the point.

Maybe a better example would be from when I lived in St. Louis MO. One year we had an uncommonly bad winter. The city ran out of salt towards the end of the season. The city shut down for a couple days because the roads were so bad. A lot of people bitched and moaned that the city should have done a better job clearing/treating roads, even though the same amount of salt had been fine for the previous 30 years. Next year the City bought more salt and plow trucks for the winter. Those same people then bitched about having to pay higher city taxes to pay for said extra salt/pretreat.

Winterizing equipment is expensive and isn't just a one shot, install it and forget about it until you need it type deal. It generally just doesn't make sense to winterize anything in Zone 2&3 climates, too expensive, too much maintenance.
 

WisJim

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Joined
Dec 20, 2010
Messages
2,263
Location
Menomonie, WI
The thing about hurricane vs tornado is the advance warning you have. Days to weeks for hurricane, minutes for tornadoes.
 

jimindm

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 29, 2011
Messages
2,395
Location
Des Moines, Iowa
History shows this happens, to some extent, every ten or so years. It’s more severe this time, but not unheard of.

Iowa gets tornadoes, not hurricanes, and there are emergency plans in place.

You might be forgetting. The whole midwest suffered a land hurricane last august. It was called a derachio.

Hundred plus MPH winds a couple of hundred miles wide and traveled from western Iowa to mid ohio.

It *****, but people will deal with it. There will be investigations about it, then millions spent. All to be forgotten till it happens in another 30 years.
 

McFarmer

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2009
Messages
2,139
I will not make light of the problems the folks in Texas are experiencing. I read where hospitals have their own generators but when they loose water, they’re done.

Imagine, one of the most high tech industries there is laid low by the one first thing man needs to survive. We’ve come a long way haven’t we.
 

AP514

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 23, 2014
Messages
768
Location
Pearland, Tx
YUP here in Houston we had the choice drain all the water lines or hope water stayed on and drip the fausets......

Wonder what is best ?
 

pmiranda

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 15, 2008
Messages
1,504
Location
Austin, TX
If you have the choice of draining the lines you're not using I'd take it! Rarely is it that easy. Our house hasn't frozen yet but we lost water yesterday and it will be days before we get it back since we're not in the central zone, and we're not a hospital. Tomorrow I should be able to get over to my shop to see if anything was damaged in the freeze and if not I can get a hot shower :)
 

jhelrey

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 15, 2010
Messages
7,240
Location
MN
It's not the freeze that you have to worry about, it's the thaw!
 

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pmiranda

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Jul 15, 2008
Messages
1,504
Location
Austin, TX
Yep, I want to be there tomorrow for the thaw. Worst case I have fittings in the wall that froze as well as the toilet and water heater I never even had a chance to turn on :(
 
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elba

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Joined
Sep 8, 2014
Messages
89
I am 73, grew up in N.E. Ohio . It was cold in the early 60s. The water line in our neighborhood froze and it was 7 ft below the surface !
 

danfromsyr

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 1, 2009
Messages
11,740
Location
Cicero, NY
I feel for the people and the animals who just haven't ever experienced such an extreme.
heck Neg temps is a pain here in Upstate NY. and we get them each year.
then turn off the power..
I saw the sea turtles needed to be brought in to safety and that a bunch of primates at a reserve died from exposure..
alot of pets and livestock suffering as well.
 

pmiranda

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 15, 2008
Messages
1,504
Location
Austin, TX
I am now a huge believer in PEX and closed cell foam. Several days below freezing with no heat but what was retained in the ground and slab and had no leaks or frozen pipes. Still have power and water pressure so we set up a space heater in the bathroom and got hot showers for the first time in 3 days before filling up some water jugs and heading back to the city for dinner.
 

ddawg16

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 11, 2008
Messages
21,005
Location
S. California
Banning accounts that post politics.

You doing ok down there? I'm guessing you have your power back.

I used to joke....San Antonio would have snow and at the same time DFW would be balmy.....

I remember one winter where it didn't go above 10 deg for about 10 days. Another year, it snowed in March.

It's Texas...don't like the weather? Wait 5 min.

Typical pattern...in the 60's for Xmas day....ice storm on Jan 2nd....
 

Miss the Pontiacs

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 7, 2016
Messages
16,415
Location
Saskatchewan Canada
Just watching the news and saw that 47 people have perished in the state of Texas.
It saddens me that people have died in your ordeal.
The other night on the news it mentioned our provincial POCO is sending 175 MW of power to the lower US states that are experiencing your cold spell.
Good Lck
 

aussieblake

Active member
Joined
Dec 26, 2013
Messages
34
Just watching the news and saw that 47 people have perished in the state of Texas.
It saddens me that people have died in your ordeal.
The other night on the news it mentioned our provincial POCO is sending 175 MW of power to the lower US states that are experiencing your cold spell.
Good Lck

Since the majority of Texas is on its own Independent power grid, anything sent to the states would not help 90% of Texas.

I am located in Oklahoma City, we were more fortunate, some people saw prolonged outages when there was a failure of a component in the power grid system, but many experienced rolling blackouts of 1-2 hours in duration. I live in town but in a more rural area and fortunately I didn't experience any outage. But most I know did.

This will change the way buildings and homes are designed and built. Hopefully it will cause the utility companies and power generation companies to upgrade their systems.

I work in the engineering sector for building systems, too many times I hear that was a 100 year event, or it doesn't get that hot or cold here long enough to cause damage. I realize planning for everything is not feasible, but this will change the way ASHRAE defines design criteria for many locations. To often design criteria is a WAG.
 

Jazz1

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Joined
Jan 3, 2016
Messages
4,184
Location
Thunder Bay On.
I am 73, grew up in N.E. Ohio . It was cold in the early 60s. The water line in our neighborhood froze and it was 7 ft below the surface !

Water main in my sons ‘hood broke. There’s been a few this week. It happens, another nearby took 3 days to repair. Only so many city workers. It’s warmed up to -20c this am as we are coming out of a very cold spell
 

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pmiranda

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Jul 15, 2008
Messages
1,504
Location
Austin, TX
The thing is, even in warm climates you should insulate your pipes so the cold doesn’t come out at 80 degrees in the summer and you don’t waste hot water. So cheap and easy to do when building but everyone seems to be in too much of a hurry to get everything done fast and save every penny without thought to what it can cost down the road. Build something right and it lasts forever.
 

lml999

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Joined
Oct 18, 2016
Messages
153
Location
Cape Cod, MA
The thing is, even in warm climates you should insulate your pipes so the cold doesn’t come out at 80 degrees in the summer and you don’t waste hot water.

I was shipping a bicycle from my in-laws house in south Florida and went in search for foam pipe insulation to pad the frame. Guys at Home Depot and Lowes had no idea what I was talking about. Weird.
 

like2wheel

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Joined
Oct 29, 2014
Messages
1,693
Location
On an as needed basis
The thing is, even in warm climates you should insulate your pipes so the cold doesn’t come out at 80 degrees in the summer and you don’t waste hot water. So cheap and easy to do when building but everyone seems to be in too much of a hurry to get everything done fast and save every penny without thought to what it can cost down the road. Build something right and it lasts forever.

Forever is a long time.

Insulation doesn't prevent pipes from reaching ambient temperatures, it just slows the process.
 

alexb2000

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 7, 2010
Messages
664
Location
Fort Worth, TX
Forever is a long time.

Insulation doesn't prevent pipes from reaching ambient temperatures, it just slows the process.

I agree. My pipe burst this week was on an insulated pipe. Not on the seam, valve, or **** end, but right in the middle where it should have been the most protected. It was on a branch that I didn't keep dripping (hose bibb). Not much you can do except shut off the water and drain the system.
 

Jeepster04

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 25, 2013
Messages
3,093
Curious, is the plumbing in the attic or something? Why do we keep seeing water pouring down from the ceilings? I've never seen plumbing in the attic of a house. Are most homes built on a slab in TX?

Looking like that pipe is just trying to sing a melody.
 

alexb2000

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Joined
Feb 7, 2010
Messages
664
Location
Fort Worth, TX
Curious, is the plumbing in the attic or something? Why do we keep seeing water pouring down from the ceilings? I've never seen plumbing in the attic of a house. Are most homes built on a slab in TX?

Looking like that pipe is just trying to sing a melody.

My house is slab on grade with most of the pipes in the slab. They come up into the attic space for the water heaters. This line was tapped onto the water feed for the heater and ran across the joists to a hose bibb inside the garage. Many houses in Texas have their water heaters in the unheated attic (to save sq. ft.) and that is where all the flooding is coming from.
 

Bert_

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Joined
Dec 24, 2016
Messages
9,699
Location
NW Iowa
It's the nice thing about a basement. Makes plumbing simple and most would take a week without heat before freezing. I realize digging a hole is easier in some places than others.
 
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