♪ Good morning, good morning, it's great to stay up late. Good morning, good morning to you ♪
(Song was written in 1939 but you'll remember it best from the 1952 movie, Singing In The Rain)

#GoodMorning #BonneJournée #GutenMorgen
Oh, and Hi Jenny, @Jefiner68
Happy #Caturday to those who celebrate?

As some of you know, it's been a wet few days, inside.. While it seems fixed it's anything but.
I sort, and fill garbage bags, and empty electronics and .. it's a long story.. #Thread

#TheFlood
Recently, I replaced my hot water heater. In an orderly set of conditions, I prepared and executed the process myself. Our Hot Water Heater (HWH) was past its *best before* date. About 10 years. I remember putting that in. It was too big for two of us but it was the same size as the previous one. (When a daughter filled a bathtub each shower)
But now, it's going to be very heavy, 5 foot tall, 200 lbs going in, now full of sediment and residual water.
First, I bought a new one /more

So, chose a normal 4-person home size. It's a messy job, rusty water dripping out, and I wasn't expecting to change it, so I had my shop TV on top of the HWH. My wife hadn't put away Christmas decorations, and my path was blocked. When all was ready, I started by turning off the power a day before, so the hot water would be mostly used up before having to be drained. Not just a cost saver, but a necessity if you are draining the tank with a garden hose. It will melt, Eye Nose

#TheFlood /more

Spent a day clearing a path, the buckets of plant soils, pots and planting stuff on my floor had to go. The extra litter boxes had to be squeezed into the corner, and any projects I was working on, had to be gathered up and put somewhere. Anticipating issues, I purchased NEW inlet and outlet valves, we can still use water while the job is being done. (Old shut off valve was stiff and unreliable)

Ran the garden hose to the downstairs shower (friggin mess of rust) and drained

#TheFlood /more

Eventually, tank was drained to the tap height, and that of the shower drain. I removed it, pushed it aside and brought in the new one, stored in a room down the hall. ( I needed help carrying it downstairs, not room-to-room) I'm creative when working alone. There's no one to help, I've learned to move fridges alone. I put the heater against the workshop door and uncrated it. I left cardboard bottom to drag on the concrete. It was in place in minutes.

#TheFlood /more

All new fittings, I usually prefer copper, I solder my pipes when I do plumbing. But, did I have a tank? Solder, Sand paper, a piece of pipe? I'm not a big fan yet of PEX piping but it's better than copper in some ways. It's flexible, withstands freezing better (Used it a the cottage) and cheaper than Copper.
Snap, Snap, Snap, I was filling the new heater.
When full of water, out of the tap, I put power on,and heated it. Got a shower, inspected the work..
Saw a drip..

#TheFlood /more

So, it could be condensation, it was on the cold water line. Tape a piece of tissue around each joint and see if they get damp? I tightened one joint. (I've considered this might have been potential weak point)
Everything wiggled and jiggled and was tight, no leaks. It's always possible to *strike* a pipe when working in my workshop, cutting a piece of wood and see it knock something off the workbench, for example. So, I don't know for certain what happened.. but then it blew

#TheFlood /more

My hearing might not be perfect, but it's an Engineer's Ear. I might not hear what you said, but somewhere, I heard water running? I don't know how long it had been since I brushed my teeth, maybe I left the tap running? (I've done this several times before) but I heard the spraying, like a firehose and a room full of spray in the workshop, water everywhere, and deep on the floor. (in preparation for this, I had installed a quick-shut-off valve when city had the water off before

#TheFlood /more

So, like a drill I had trained for, I screamed FLOOD FLOOD FLOOD (that really moves sailors, BTW)
and tore open access to the water meter and cut the water supply. It was unbelievable. By now, my wife is here, the ceiling is dripping. There's some lumber on racks above, a pipe full of seldom used clothing on hangers, a table of computer parts and electrons. Tables of seed packages, tops of jars, full of seeds.
Everything in plastic tubs, was overflowing with water, ...

#TheFlood /more

After moving everything to do the swap, I spent a few days, cleaning and sorting and had all my tools in a big rubbermaid tub. (now full of water)
My plant soils, some sand in a 5 gallon bucket, potting soil and seeding soils, stacks of Red Solo Cups, my whole winter gardening workshop.
The *kids* like to be where I am, so I had to put more litter boxes in my workshop, especially for Jasper.
A new box was beside it, full of water too.
The inches on the floor found the drain

#TheFlood /more

This was not a regular old flood. That would have been easier to deal with. This line let go, it disconnected, broke, and like a garden hose, sprayed upwards onto the ceiling, all connections, all storage, dripped over places far away from the source, so every pigeon hole with garden seeds needs to be checked, emptied and discarded.
Even plastic pails, they won't rust, but will hide water and keep humidity just right for mold. So, even after all is dry looking,

#TheFlood /more

For example, I keep a few ice cream tubs, some with sorted nails or screws, some with parts that must stay together until I finish repairing, in a cup or lid.
They are all full of water. The TVs were dripping. CDs (Audio/DVD/MP3/MP4 storage) dripping.
The side of the new HWH had a plastic sleeve for the manual. It was bulged full of water, I had to slit the bottom to let it escape. All this is time consuming, frustrating and messy.. But the worst part of it all was..

#TheFlood /more

The electrical panel! 220v Electric Heat, Hot water tank, stove, each room has fuses. All dripping. Uncertain if it was safe to walk into the water to turn anything off? There was no arcing , that's a good thing. No smell of burning connectors or popped breakers. Also good. But can't touch a damned thing.
I rarely need fans here. We summer on the ocean. All my box fans, room fans, all there. I had to borrow fans from my neighbour. One just for the fuse panel, to dry it before needed

#TheFlood

I also had to remove the Hot Water heater fuses. The hot water was still boiling but the water pipe was broken. That took another scary moment, after drying, I put all power off to remove those fuses and then back on. Just in case. The power is safe.
But everything else needs drying, hanging coats, stored patio umbrella, all boxes of stored anything, cardboard is all wet. And threw it all, Jasper tip-toed in, shaking his wet paws and used the emptied litter box.
I'll be in the basement /end
@Rasta Wow, that's more home-owner excitement than I would know what to do with. It sounds like you're handling it as best you can. I'm glad you're all safe.
... Jasper is clearly not phased by the situation. Nor does he seem duly impressed by the effort that went into his litter box being made accessible. Nothing like a cat to minimize a human's dramatic save of the home. 🐈
I hope you'll be able to get it fixed and have some time to relax.
@ldmay65 Well, I do less work each day, most of the work is drying. It's like watching dry, not every exciting. If I am awake, there's a heater in there too, and the moisture is showing on upstairs windows so it must be displacing it somewhere. As it gets one corner cleared. I put a chair there, and my screen to watch or listen to something while I pull over ever bucket or box to empty and rebuild in a clean dry container.
Forced to sort the basement finally
@Rasta Your experience is making me think about what we have in our basement, where it is, if we really need it, and that we should check the age of our water heater.
@ldmay65 Insurance is my biggest concern. He's what happens today. Once, I needed a wire over there ►, I'd just kill the power, put a line through, light on the end and wire it in. Insurance would cancel on you for stuff like that, they want zero risk. Even though, I've done bigger things than a Red Seal HVAC worker, every few years, they change the CERT, so you have to qualify again (pay a fee) for what you are already qualified to do. And accomplishes nothing safer but money for all.
@ldmay65 If your oil tank is metal, they realize, they rust, and so they set the limit on the life of them. If they say, max 10 years, they will force you to replace it, even if not needed. Mine was in my basement, away from the elements.
I check the dates, take a photo so you don't have to return to check serial numbers.
@Rasta @ldmay65 Wish you better luck in the future. I had two floods in my home owning lifetime. 1st time a friend called to tell me we had water coming out of our basement window. I lived in an old hotel. A main had ruptured near our foundation and came up into our building. 2nd event in a mobile home we left for the weekend, water heater cracked and the entire floor was covered, ruined much of the underfloor insulation. Even tho 30yrs past I still lay awake some nights listening for a leak.
@ddmgmgh You have no idea the terror I get when I hear strange noises. My wife can't turn off all her notifications on her phone and some beep or buzz at 3 am wakes me. Worse, is power off. That wakes me, everything quiet.
@Rasta How I can relate to this.
Often use a radio to cover up the silence at night nowadays, maybe related to the fact that our first house was just across the right of way of a CN mainline? For that decade it felt like earthquake tremors every 1/2 hour or so, not to mention the horns, and I slept perfectly.
Sometimes the silence now seems deafening.
@ddmgmgh On ships, ventilation is always running. no matter what you shut down, ventilation stays running> When ventilation stops, that's time to move. I lived near the main switchboard. I'd already be ready to transfer power to another source when the senior electrician got there.
@Rasta Isn't it something that you can get used to sleep in that sort of environment yet still wake up to some new sound or lack of sound!
@ddmgmgh I've slept through Mortar firing, that made the deck above me sink into the sleeping area
@Rasta No! This is the stuff of nightmares! Please tell me this was just a dream at the end.
@ddmgmgh would be nice if it was a dream