Why Do All Three Faucets Turn On When I Operate Just One?

  • Context: High School 
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    Mystery
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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the phenomenon where activating one faucet in a classroom causes all three faucets to turn on simultaneously. Participants are exploring potential explanations for this occurrence, considering aspects of plumbing, physics, and possible mechanical or electrical issues.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant suggests that the issue may stem from a plumbing error, indicating that the piping could be incorrectly configured.
  • Another participant argues that the problem could be related to electric controls, such as infrared sensors, which might be miswired to trigger all faucets simultaneously.
  • Some participants propose that fluid dynamics, hydraulics, and potential venting problems could be causing the faucets to operate together, possibly due to pressure issues or worn valves.
  • There is a suggestion that physical connections, such as a rod linkage between the faucets, could explain the simultaneous operation, although this would typically require visible movement of the faucet handles.
  • One participant raises the possibility of external factors, such as vibrations from one faucet affecting the others, or even questions the authenticity of the original claim as a potential fabrication.
  • A mathematical approach is proposed involving divergence and integrals to analyze the flow from the faucets, suggesting a more theoretical investigation into the phenomenon.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants do not reach a consensus on the cause of the phenomenon. Multiple competing views and hypotheses are presented, with no clear resolution or agreement on a singular explanation.

Contextual Notes

Some participants note that the lack of detailed background information limits the ability to distinguish between the various proposed explanations. There are also unresolved assumptions regarding the physical setup and the nature of the faucets.

blueman
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faucet mystery (help!)

I'm in a physics class and we have 3 sinks in the class room on the same wall.All the faucet are off. When you turn one faucet on all 3 faucet are on and the water is running from them.
So;
when you turn faucet 1 on , 2 and 3 are also on
when you turn faucet 2 on , 1 and 3 are also on
when you turn faucet 3 on , 1 and 2 are also on
:rolleyes: :rolleyes: :shy:
It's impossible, but it's true.So we are tryinh to find an explanation for this mystery. Any help?? How does it work?? Why does it work??Please help,

Thank you,
blueman
 
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Sounds like someone messed up the piping. Look under the sinks that'll, probably solve it.
 
This has nothing to do with physics and should be posted in the puzzles section.
 
actionintegral said:
This has nothing to do with physics and should be posted in the puzzles section.

if it isn't physics ,why should I post it in the puzzle section ??
anyways, the pips are connected properly ...some maintenance guys came and checked the connections...
 
The only way that I can make any sense out of it is if you have electric controls on the taps (such as the IR sensors used in some public washrooms). If so, a wiring error could cause them to trigger each other.
 
Everything has to do with physics. Sounds to me like an issue of fluid dynamics, hydraulics and vacuums.

Look for worn or poorly-fitted valves in the faucets, or venting problems causing too much pressure when the water flows. And call a decent plumber, not just some maintenance guys.
 
I think I saw this on TV.
 
Dense said:
Look for worn or poorly-fitted valves in the faucets, or venting problems causing too much pressure when the water flows.
That doesn't make sense either. If a faucet is physically closed, then the actions of the others should have no effect. The only interaction between them should be a possible lessening of flow rate with more than one open, and then only if the line pressure is low. Physically opening one tap cannot physically open another one.
 
Unless there's some type of rod linkage connecting the three valves. Even then you'd expect the other faucets handles to move when you move one.
 
  • #10
Reminds me of those lateral thinking problems. So little background information is given that there are countless feasible explanations, which can't be distinguished unless further experiments are carried out. For one example, if water through one tap causes enough vibration, the other taps may leak while it is open (you'd want to listen how much noise the pipes make, to support or disprove this one). For another example, "blueman" could be making the whole thing up. You could investigate the plumbing, the fixture design, the teacher.. This is like trying to pick the curve of best fit (and is it linear? exponential? sinusoidal?) when you only have one or two data points.
 
  • #11
blueman said:
I'm in a physics class and we have 3 sinks in the class room on the same wall.All the faucet are off. When you turn one faucet on all 3 faucet are on and the water is running from them.
So;
when you turn faucet 1 on , 2 and 3 are also on
when you turn faucet 2 on , 1 and 3 are also on
when you turn faucet 3 on , 1 and 2 are also on
:rolleyes: :rolleyes: :shy:
It's impossible, but it's true.So we are tryinh to find an explanation for this mystery. Any help?? How does it work?? Why does it work??Please help,
Why impossible? The taps are obviously in parallel and the faucets are in series with the water pipe.

AM
 
  • #12
:confused:
 
  • #13
This sounds like a joke... :zzz:
 
  • #14
I've got the solution you all!
As we all know, divergence can be thought of as measuring an outflow from a source. So we should perform the following calculation:
\int_{V} \bigtriangledown\cdot faucet\ d\tau
being carful to make our volume big enough to pick up all faucets.
This will measure the outflow into our chosen volume from all the faucets
By Green's Theorem this should be equal to:
\oint_{S}faucet\cdot da
Which, of course, just represents the pipe flow to the sources as it passes through our surface.
Hence I propose we should vary our volume to find the point where the integrals no longer agree which will pinpoint the precise location at which the cause of this mysterious phenomenon exists. :smile:
 
Last edited:
  • #15
What happens when you flush the toilet?
 
  • #16
actionintegral said:
What happens when you flush the toilet?

Ahhhh Spin off research...where all the great discoveries are made.
 
  • #17


As long as all the faucets have handles and they work properly and are closed while one of the faucets is working, there is no way all three will work simultanously. However faucets might have cencors so there might be a case with wiring.
 

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