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I'm referring to how running a faucet or flushing the toilet effects the temperature in the shower.

2006-06-18 18:07:36 · 10 answers · asked by osupoolfanatic 1 in Home & Garden Do It Yourself (DIY)

10 answers

Your problem is caused by low water pressure at the source. You can report it to the water provider, but it won't help much. Worth a try, I guess.

The best solution is a device that is added to your water line that moderates pressure. Talk to a plumber. Mine is on the line either coming into or going out of my water heater. It looks like a small LP gas can with water lines on the top and the bottom.

In the mean time, you could turn off the water to the toilets while you shower, they can flush and you can shower. When you're done, turn the water to the toilets back on to fill the flush tanks back up.

2006-06-18 18:08:34 · answer #1 · answered by Ken C. 6 · 0 0

There is almost no way to eliminate this problem. It has nothing to do with water pressure, nor with how your house was plumbed, although plumbing issues can make it worse. Any time you set shower valves to your liking, then someone else changes the water demand elsewhere in the house, whichever side(hot or cold) is used is going to lose pressure. An inexpensive fix would be to ask people to be more polite when someone is in the shower. Or, if you must do something, seperate your service where it enters the house, dedicating one line for just your bath. Install an inline surge tank, then an on demand water heating system serving only your bath, and this should eliminate the problem, at least for the most part.(you may still be effected if there are several fixtures being used at once)

2006-06-19 08:52:20 · answer #2 · answered by DBP 2 · 0 0

Best way is to make sure the shower is the first thing that comes off of the hot water pipe after the water heater. Could put a water heater near the shower to do this. People sometimes install tankless water heaters near the bathroom to solve this problem. Also, don't use pipe that is too thick. Thick pipe holds more water, so when you turn the shower on in the morning it takes longer to flush out the cold water that has been sitting in the pipes overnight.

2006-06-18 18:14:55 · answer #3 · answered by siegrisj 2 · 0 0

The best way to guarantee no change in water pressure is to run separate water line to each device. Use wirsbo or pex tubing off of a manifold. Do this for both the hot and cold supply to each thing. Faucet, shower, sink, toilet. If you don't want to be that elaborate, make sure that your water heater has a direct supply from the water input to your home. Then run the line direct to the shower before it branches off to anything else.

2006-06-19 01:09:37 · answer #4 · answered by joatmon585 3 · 0 0

When you have the old galvanized pipes that supply your hot and cold water, after many years of use, they begin to corrode inside the pipe. This restricts your water flow or pressure. So when you take a shower and use hot and cold water and someone turns on a faucet or flushes the toilet, the amount of cold water going to your shower head is reduced. Then all you have is hot water coming out. When you have copper piping, when someone turns on another faucet or flushes the toilet, there is sufficient hot and cold water pressure for both locations.

2006-06-18 19:45:43 · answer #5 · answered by Westernfront1 1 · 0 0

You will have to gain access behind the shower. Some have an access panel, some you will have to break sheet rock. Go to your pumbing store and ask for a mixer valve for your shower. You will need to tell them how many holes were drilled in the shower for the valve only(i.e. not the bath spout or the shower spout.) You will need to have some knowlege of cutting pipe and soldering some couplings and possibly some additional pipe. You may also need to check to see if the valve is a sweat valve or adapter valve, meaning do you have to by pipe thread adaptors or simply solder the half inch pipe directly into the valve. The best thing you can do is gain access exactly behind the valve, and take a picture of it and either send it to me or show it to the hardware store employee.

There is no need for a pressure can, nor does it have anything to do with where your pipe is drawn from. I promise, I used to do this for a living.

2006-06-18 18:15:02 · answer #6 · answered by Rockstar 6 · 0 0

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2016-10-31 02:51:12 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

My showers are a littel underpresured whenrunnung other water appliances. Is there an effectifve and inexpencive way to remedy this/

2006-06-18 18:51:21 · answer #8 · answered by Colin R 1 · 0 0

separate lines running to toilet and shower. dont branch off of one, separate the lines right after the heater.

2006-06-18 18:11:54 · answer #9 · answered by sobrien 6 · 0 0

In a word, yes.

2006-06-18 18:15:28 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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