SaidIt

SaidIt

wendolynne 6 insightful - 3 fun6 insightful - 2 fun7 insightful - 3 fun 3 years ago

glad you are ok. Did your house get any water damage?

magnora7[S] 8 insightful - 3 fun8 insightful - 2 fun9 insightful - 3 fun 3 years ago

Thanks. A little tiny bit of water damage, but it was mostly in a garage wall so hopefully repairs won't be too bad. I'm just worried about how long it's going to take... it could be weeks, because hundreds of thousands are having the exact same problem. I never before thought about repairman shortages in big cities if everyone has the exact same damage. Hopefully bottled water is more easily available soon too. I had to go borrow water from a friend because the grocery stores had none. I ended up ordering water online! lol

Comatoast 4 insightful - 3 fun4 insightful - 2 fun5 insightful - 3 fun 3 years ago

What part of the pipe burst? Depending on where it was, it might be pretty easy to fix yourself. Sharkbites are a godsend.

As far as your garage, I don't know how your garage is laid out (concrete, carpeting, if it just hit the baseboards or it went up the drywall, etc.)

magnora7[S] 6 insightful - 3 fun6 insightful - 2 fun7 insightful - 3 fun 3 years ago

Yeah I thought about giving it a try, but I have to dig up a section of the pipe I think, as well as cut out a section of sheetrock. The sharkbites might be a good idea, thanks for that.

I had some rugs in the garage and use it as a workshop, the rugs all got all wet. But that was my only real damage thankfully. There's probably some damage inside the wall too, but I might just let it go since it's just a garage exterior wall and the drywall in there is already a mess. Also I think it only leaked for an hour or so before we shut it off, and 98% of the water didn't go in the wall, just sprayed in to the sideyard. So hopefully maybe it'll be not a big deal. Maybe I will start cutting some drywall and see where the copper meets the PVC and just take the PVC off or cut it down to a short undamaged part. Also the PVC pipe coming out of the ground from the buried mains line completely shattered so I'm not sure how far I need to cut back on the PVC pipe and dig down before it's reliable again, or should I dig up the whole pipe back to the mains connection? Seems like I have to decide a quick fix vs a good fix... might have to settle on the quick fix for now because plumbers and parts are in ridiculously high demand. I think if I could get clean ends on my PVC pipes (where it's not fractured) I could do it. I'm just not sure how far I'll have to go in each direction before the pipe isn't brittle and fractured anymore.

Comatoast 6 insightful - 3 fun6 insightful - 2 fun7 insightful - 3 fun 3 years ago

To be honest, you should probably cut all the way to the main and replace it where you can with PEX. It's more flexible. Invest in an oscillating multitool. When you're putting the copper back, make sure you wrap it in pipe insulation.

As far as the drywall, stud finders will be your saving grace. At least in my experience,it's easiest to cut at the studs, that way you've got a good anchoring point instead of just trying to ugly-putty it back on there and have it fall through with so much as a fart. Once you've got the square back in, you can put drywall mesh over the seam spots and just do a putty/sand cycle until it looks fine. I would definitely check anything that got wet though,especially if you guys didn't have a dehumidifier and fans running down there the whole time. The rugs are probably fine, just pressure wash, then rent a rug doctor and shampoo the shit out of them.

wendolynne 3 insightful - 2 fun3 insightful - 1 fun4 insightful - 2 fun 3 years ago

Water pipes and related hardware will be impossible to get. Might have to have someone deliver from Oklahoma or Louisiana.

magnora7[S] 2 insightful - 2 fun2 insightful - 1 fun3 insightful - 2 fun 3 years ago

Yeah I'm thinking about just ordering on amazon. I had an amazon package delivered 2 days ago. It'd probably be the fastest way to get pipe hardware. The future is weird. I don't have water but I'm ordering water supplies from the other side of the nation