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References: [ +subject:/^(?:^\s*(re|sv|fwd|fw)[\[\]\d]*[:>-]+\s*)*\[Shop\-talk\]\s+\[Bulk\]\s+Re\:\s+Seasonal\s+water\s+hammer\?\s*$/: 3 ]

Total 3 documents matching your query.

1. Re: [Shop-talk] [Bulk] Re: Seasonal water hammer? (score: 1)
Author: "Karl Vacek" <KVacek@Ameritech.net>
Date: Wed, 5 Nov 2014 14:52:16 -0600
I'm not a plumber though I do all my own work. Ideally, every water outlet should have a hammer trap - one for cold, one for hot. Most simply, a hammer trap is teed into the supply line as close as p
/html/shop-talk/2014-11/msg00020.html (12,755 bytes)

2. Re: [Shop-talk] [Bulk] Re: Seasonal water hammer? (score: 1)
Author: "Pat Horne" <pat@hornesystemstx.com>
Date: Wed, 5 Nov 2014 16:07:22 -0600
Larry, I've had this kind of problem on taps that we don't use often. Turns out that the problem was that the packing nut on the tap was loose, allowing the valve stem to move a bit, affecting the wa
/html/shop-talk/2014-11/msg00021.html (10,445 bytes)

3. Re: [Shop-talk] [Bulk] Re: Seasonal water hammer? (score: 1)
Author: David Scheidt <dmscheidt@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 6 Nov 2014 13:33:24 -0600
If you have hammer traps, and you don't have water hammer, you wouldn't have water hammer if you didn't have them. Air chamber hammer traps simply don't work. They're full of water, and not air, in
/html/shop-talk/2014-11/msg00041.html (9,816 bytes)


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