i'm installing a water softener, but there's no shut-off valve under my house or at the street...this is the first time i've ever seen a complete lack of homeowner control over house flowshould i just call the city? the only thing i can find outside is one of those neptune meters (they just hover their scanners over the plate and they get the reading instead of opening the cover)...there's no shut-off valve there, though i just need them to shut it off long enough for me drain the pipes to relieve the water pressure, cut the PEX piping, and install the shut-off valve myself...once that happens, they can turn it back on and i can install the softener bypass at my leisure[Edited on June 7, 2009 at 11:46 PM. Reason : .]
6/7/2009 11:43:50 PM
wow that sucks. I assume that the city could do this for you (there may be a fee involved)
6/7/2009 11:45:18 PM
look harder - every house has the ability to turn off the water - if a pipe breaks you don't have to wait for the city to come turn off the water
6/7/2009 11:47:32 PM
you want to come check it out? i knew there was no cut-off under the house when i bought it...i had the house inspected and the inspector noted the same thing...i also know my yard and that there is no other access except the one near the street where the meter is...obviously it CAN be shut off, but there's no "normal" valve (as in, no circular or linear twist-to-control-flow knob) for me to mess with...makes sense to me, too, otherwise people could easily turn their water back on when the city shuts it off3/4" PEX piping comes directly into the house...from there, it splits and does its thing...there are 2-3 valves, but only in specific places (line that goes to the ice maker and the water heater are the two i know exactly...i don't remember the 3rd one, if there is one)i know that that's the general idea, but i'm telling you that that's not the case here
6/7/2009 11:55:42 PM
just go turn it off at the meter.
6/8/2009 12:17:20 AM
^
6/8/2009 12:23:38 AM
have you ever seen one of those neptune meters?there's nowhere you can turn it off.
6/8/2009 12:34:25 AM
ah, that's what i get for skimming.
6/8/2009 12:36:15 AM
in theory there should be a valve installed after the meter, before the dwelling...the meter type shouldn't have anything to do with it
6/8/2009 12:46:57 AM
post some pictures i guess - within 30 seconds i found the followinghttp://www.google.com/search?rlz=1C1GGLS_enUS291US304&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=how+to+turn+off+water+neptune+meterthe highlightshttp://www.co.currituck.nc.us/water-leak-problems.cfm
6/8/2009 12:47:04 AM
you just posted the same pic twice
6/8/2009 12:52:36 AM
6/8/2009 1:27:39 AM
^^^ yeah, that's what it looks like...i'll be honest, i didn't actually google how to turn the water OFF on a neptune meter, i just googled the neptune meter itself ^ it's called a "curb key" and they're something like $10 at home depot, apparently...i'll pick one up this afternoon i appreciate the help, y'all
6/8/2009 7:45:23 AM
you don't have a pair of pliers? those work just as well...
6/8/2009 7:49:18 AM
yes, they do...but the people who owned the house before me planted flowers around the plate (for obvious reasons)...the lilies are in full bloom and i can't easily get to it without trashing the bed...it's a pretty deep hole (i'd have to lay on my stomach and reach down with my long pliers, even assuming it's not too tight and i can turn it from a vertical position because there's no room for me to do it horizontally)
6/8/2009 8:00:41 AM
ah. well you have fun with that.and fwiw, my parents house doesn't have a second shutoff valve - just the meter valve. I really see no point in having the second (unless you're that concerned about having a backup valve). we've always used the meter valve in the past
6/8/2009 8:02:42 AM
ahahaha, I've been in the emergency situation, where my water heater burst and soaked my crawl space. thankfully, it was sloped, so only the corner where the heater was was underwater and it flowed into the backyard. interesting morning.I have no shutoff valve (that I could locate early in the morning), so we had to shut the neptune valve off.Good times. Pair of pliers.
6/8/2009 8:06:22 AM
6/8/2009 8:16:53 AM
try: Charlotte pipe company or McMaster Carr
6/8/2009 8:21:59 AM
^^ meantioning hot water heater, make sure if its electric you turn it off otherwise youll burn it out. Gas, not at as much a worry but still probably a good idea to turn it off as well. Also if gas if you turn it off, make sure you either 1 keep pilot light on, 2 make sure gas is completely off.
6/8/2009 9:24:56 AM
^ yeah, my dad told me the same thing...my order of action is this:1.) shut off main into the house2.) turn off water heater3.) close all existing valves4.) open faucets/spigots to relieve water pressure in the lines (don't know how long this'll take)5.) cut the main line with a trashcan underneath to collect any additional water6.) install shut-off valve7.) install softener bypass8.) open main into the house9.) check for leaks at bypass10.) open existing valves11.) turn water heater back on12.) check for leaks over the next few hours and daysam i missing anything? i'm using PEX (obviously), brass fittings (there's currently copper everywhere else, but it doesn't seem to matter), the crimps and crimping tool (the new standard, not that PEX-specific one where the tool alone is $80) instead of the gatorbite connectors (twice as expensive and they make me nervous)...using teflon tape on the PVC softener connections, using potassium chloride instead of sodium since i do water my houseplants with distilled tap water and sears had the potassium on sale for $5/40lbs[Edited on June 8, 2009 at 9:40 AM. Reason : .]
6/8/2009 9:39:27 AM
6/8/2009 10:00:07 AM