Outdoor water faucet - Printable Version +- Cincinnati Bengals Message Board / Forums - Home of Jungle Noise (https://thebengalsboard.com) +-- Forum: Off Topic Forums (https://thebengalsboard.com/forum-5.html) +--- Forum: Klotsch (https://thebengalsboard.com/forum-22.html) +--- Thread: Outdoor water faucet (/thread-15976.html) |
Outdoor water faucet - Goalpost - 05-14-2018 I have an issue with a water faucet outside. My parents just downsized into a house last year, they are in their early 80's, and the faucet is on the side of the house where there is a slope off the house. I can connect the hose to it easily, but to use it, they will have to walk over a sideways slope to turn the water off and on. It's really not safe for them if I am not there to do it for them...turning the water on and off. Bad location. And they want to use it for watering outside. I want to extend the shutoff valve. We cant move it because it is sort of like a condo. It is what it is. I've been looking on line with a couple of options. One guy said, take a very thick rubber hose, screw it into the house, and attach a brass shutoff valve at the end of it. On the other side of the coupling, attach a new hose, and just turn the water on at the house and turn the water on and off at the new valve. Problem is, I'm not sure a hose can handle the pressure like pipes do in a house. The other option is to extend with PVC pipe but that is more involved. Anyone here ever extend their water faucet? Maybe you put a new deck in and it didn't access as well. Or shrubbery overgrew and blocked it, etc. I'm skeptical that a hose can be used this way, but I'm wondering if others have ever faced this. Your suggestions would be appreciated. RE: Outdoor water faucet - fredtoast - 05-15-2018 Heavy duty hose will handle any regular house water pressure. Problem will be finding a short one so you don't have a big coil lying around. |