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hermetic

(8,622 posts)
Thu Jun 11, 2020, 09:32 AM Jun 2020

Water pressure weirdness

The water pressure has recently dropped significantly in the bathtub which has a round 1-handle faucet. It stays the same for hot, cold, and all points in between. The faucet is on an outside wall and about 2 feet away outside is a standing pipe connection for the garden hose. The pressure here has also dropped. But, the pressure is normal in the bathroom sink across the room from the tub. Likewise for the kitchen sink.

Went down to the basement to look for leaks or anything unusual but all seemed fine. The water here is heavily mineralized. Calcium buildup is common. I’m guessing the pipes are 40-50 yrs old.

I was wondering if you had any suggestions for things I could try before I do the obvious and call a plumber.
In gratitude…

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Water pressure weirdness (Original Post) hermetic Jun 2020 OP
It could be a chunk of calcium buildup within the valve(s) itself. n/t RKP5637 Jun 2020 #1
You are probably going to need a plumber Chainfire Jun 2020 #2
Are you talking about flow rate or pressure? Kaleva Jun 2020 #3
Ah. Yes hermetic Jun 2020 #5
You mean flow. Check aeroator (screen asbly) on spout. mobeau69 Jun 2020 #4
 

Chainfire

(17,757 posts)
2. You are probably going to need a plumber
Thu Jun 11, 2020, 09:49 AM
Jun 2020

Tub faucets are generally the hardest problem for even a handy homeowner to deal with.

If it is a calcification problem, you may well need an expensive re-pipe. It is possible that you may be able to prolong necessary repairs by having the faucet serviced. In my plumbing career, I have removed pipes that were so stopped up that you could not see light through a piece 3" long; there is no easy fix for that. The buildup is like concrete and it is generally not cost effective to try to remove the buildup and save the pipe.

Call the plumber, complain about the low pressure in the faucet, it could be that a piece of trash has become lodged in a place that can can be cleared, but in the meantime, start saving some money for the long-term fix.

If you end up needing a re-pipe, try to get three estimates from three reputable plumbers.

Good luck.

Kaleva

(38,164 posts)
3. Are you talking about flow rate or pressure?
Thu Jun 11, 2020, 10:00 AM
Jun 2020

Pressure will remain pretty steady regardless of the size of opening. I've removed old galvanized water lines that were so built up with scale that you couldn't get a pencil into the pipe. My guess is that you'll need a plumber to replace the pipe unless you can do the job yourself.

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