Upgrading water to an old house

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around upgrading the water system in an old house built in 1834. Participants explore issues related to water pressure, piping materials, and flow rates, with a focus on plumbing standards and potential improvements.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Homework-related

Main Points Raised

  • One participant notes that the current water pressure is about 35-40 psi and seeks information on typical residential water pressure, suggesting that 50-70 psi might be appropriate.
  • Another participant suggests that 40-50 psi is acceptable and recommends consulting plumbing books for guidelines.
  • A concern is raised about potential lead exposure from original piping, humorously suggesting an alternative beverage.
  • A participant shares their experience of replacing old copper pipes with Pex pipe, highlighting its advantages such as flexibility and ease of installation.
  • The original poster mentions issues with low volumetric flow from the shower, exacerbated by a low flow shower head, and expresses a desire for better water flow and temperature retention.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express varying opinions on acceptable water pressure and plumbing materials, with no consensus reached on the best approach for upgrading the water system.

Contextual Notes

Participants reference specific plumbing standards and personal experiences, but there is no agreement on the ideal water pressure or the best materials for piping upgrades.

awinn
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Hi. I grew up in a house built in 1834. I'm now in college and my parents still live at home. I am a senior in Mechanical Engineering and when I'm home I look around and see the things I can improve. The electricity was all just redone by a very good electrician (and not a moment too soon, from what I saw come out!). But now I am turning my attention to their water. I believe they have about 35-40 psi from a spring, but I am curious to know what typical water pressure for a house is (ie potential). I am going to keep looking online for an answer- it seems to be about 50-70 is appropriate. However, I figured there would probably be a standard, but I can't find one.

I'll run some calculations with 40 psi that they have (w/o a booster pump) and see what kind of piping I'd be looking at.

Any help is appreciated! thanks from WVU!
 
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I think anything between 40 and 50 PSI is acceptable. You need not reinvent the wheel here. Buy a good book on plumbing. They have all the guidlines and requirements needed.
 
If the piping is original I'd me worried about the amount of lead your parents might be ingesting, better switch to gin to be on the safe side.
 
I had a water leak under my house last week, and after inspecting it, I found all my copper pipes were turning green and corroding (they were very old). I called my brother who is a plumber, and yesterday we cut out all of my pipes and replaced them with Pex pipe, which is the industry standard, in TN.

It is flexible, easy to work with, freeze-proof, and required very little tools (mainly a pipe-stretcher, not needed with more expensive "shark-bite" fittings).

This was a 1-day job for a 2 bath, 1 kitchen, 1200 sq/ft ranch house built on a crawl-space (with professional brother).

Look into Pex pipe, it is available at any hardware or plumbing supply store.
 
Last edited:
Sorry for the long absence. We've used Pex pipe for some of the new stuff we've done around there.

I should have added in the original message that the reason I keep thinking about their water is when I stay there I am reminded each time- the shower does not seem to have a large enough volumetric flow and so dad installed a super low flow shower head. basically turns a stream into really small droplets. The hot water cools off in about 8" and it just sucks. A larger volumetric flow would let them use a "Real" shower head and have "Real" hot water in the shower.

I have a new topic I'll be posting about shortly! Thanks for the replies :)
 

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