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View Poll Results: How many people will die?
Just me. 0 0%
Just you. 0 0%
Everybody. 1 4.35%
Nine girls named Brandy 6 26.09%
Ann Coulter 2 8.70%
Tigger 3 13.04%
The entire staff of Mythbusters 7 30.43%
Tater Tots Spore of a Mushroom Cloud 4 17.39%
Voters: 23. You may not vote on this poll

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Old 01-04-2010, 11:15 PM   #11
No Worries
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Electric pipe wrap: http://www.wrap-on.com/index.htm
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Old 01-04-2010, 11:42 PM   #12
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When you are done with that, run and get two old lamps, a couple 100W bulbs and an extension cord and ensure that this doesn't happen again. Just a suggestion from the guy from Michigan.
My cistern is 400 feet from the house. The way I see it, shit will catch fire, or be all better.

JC
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Old 01-04-2010, 11:52 PM   #13
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Leave the vodka on the porch for about 2 hours. That's better than ice.

Was that picture from last year, of your neighbour's shack, a previous attempt to thaw some pipes?
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Old 01-05-2010, 12:41 AM   #14
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my well is 150 feet down and all my pipes are in the (heated) basement

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Old 01-05-2010, 01:18 AM   #15
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Yeh I didn't know that water pipes were ever outside, I always thought they were in warm basements, or had to be installed below the depth at which the ground freezes (I think 3 1/2 feet down here). This seems to apparently be a common problem (?) so how can it be fixed (not the almost scary Tigger style fix) so that it doesn't happen again?
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Old 01-05-2010, 08:33 AM   #16
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TIGGER View Post
I was thinking that too... I'd honestly go with a couple light bulbs...if you thaw the ice too fast the pipe will burst for sure...
ceramic heating bulbs, throw off a lot more heat than the lightbulbs. Gotta own reptiles to know about them though

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Old 01-05-2010, 08:38 AM   #17
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Quote:
Originally Posted by derf View Post
Yeh I didn't know that water pipes were ever outside, I always thought they were in warm basements, or had to be installed below the depth at which the ground freezes (I think 3 1/2 feet down here). This seems to apparently be a common problem (?) so how can it be fixed (not the almost scary Tigger style fix) so that it doesn't happen again?
Yea that was a temp fix, the obvious permanent solution is to mount a light fixture (or two) have it hard wired and put it on a timer. It works and isn't any more danger than any light you have in the house. When did light bulbs become so dangerous? He could also just buy one of these cheap plasma TVs everyone is selling and put it down there....
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Old 01-05-2010, 08:47 AM   #18
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TIGGER View Post
Yea that was a temp fix, the obvious permanent solution is to mount a light fixture (or two) have it hard wired and put it on a timer. It works and isn't any more danger than any light you have in the house. When did light bulbs become so dangerous? He could also just buy one of these cheap plasma TVs everyone is selling and put it down there....
Do they ever throw off some serious heat! I got a tan last time I was at Best Buy looking at Tvs..
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Old 01-05-2010, 10:15 AM   #19
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Quote:
Originally Posted by derf View Post
Yeh I didn't know that water pipes were ever outside, I always thought they were in warm basements, or had to be installed below the depth at which the ground freezes (I think 3 1/2 feet down here). This seems to apparently be a common problem (?) so how can it be fixed (not the almost scary Tigger style fix) so that it doesn't happen again?
The only way I could fix it, would be to bury the cistern so that the outlet pipe was below ground.

The cistern hold 500 gallons, is six feet long, and sits on the side of a hill that's un-accessible by backhoe. In other words, that shit ain't happening.

Anyway, the blow torch worked, nothing melted (much...), and the water is flowing again.

JC
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Old 01-05-2010, 10:19 AM   #20
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Originally Posted by askmrjesus View Post
The only way I could fix it, would be to bury the cistern so that the outlet pipe was below ground.

The cistern hold 500 gallons, is six feet long, and sits on the side of a hill that's un-accessible by backhoe. In other words, that shit ain't happening.

Anyway, the blow torch worked, nothing melted (much...), and the water is flowing again.

JC
Sweet!
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