Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#61
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I'm in Hawkins. These filters were just under 4 years old.
I believe there was another incident with the same filter canister down the street but that was second hand info. Last edited by Miboater; 07-16-2025 at 07:17 PM. Reason: Additional info |
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#62
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I think if someone does install a pressure regulator it would be good if they share what they installed, which company installed it and how much it cost so those here can benefit from the experience.
That said, I still feel the Villages water must have some way of limiting the water pressure to our homes to avoid situations like this. This is why it's important to tell us which Village you are from so we can figure out if the problem is in a specific area supplied by a specific source or not. |
#63
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#64
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Domestic fixtures are nominally rated to 80psi. I.e. this is the pressure they can expect to run without issue. If you are seeing pressures well above 80, there is something else going on. I have seen pressure hitting around 100 in a home with a failed expansion tank on the water heater. If the supply side was exceeding even 90psi, toilet valves and sinks everywhere would be failing constantly in that neighborhood. Certain neighborhoods have a lot of pressure relief valves that start popping off between 75-80. I see these in a lot of homes off BV, north of LSL. These relief valves are in some other areas too, but practically every home up that way has them. I am a licensed, certified and working home inspector. I get into a lot of homes. I have never found any home with a functional expansion tank where the pressure exceeded 80psi. |
#65
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#66
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#67
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I've had Nova in my garage for 3 years. No issues so far. I do my own filter changes. But if this is really an issue, seems like they should just install them universally rather than end up with angry customers. |
#68
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#69
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#70
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If it's a "new" problem, why haven't water pressure spikes been a problem historically? Are the pressure spikes "new"? Or are the current run of canisters unable to handle the pressure like previous ones did? |
#71
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Typically, a pressure regulator is a one way device that will control the incoming water pressure to the house. However, if the pressure increase is caused by a defective expansion tank, the pressure regulator will not control the pressure inside the house and at the filtration system equipment.
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#72
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Yep. Which doesn't explain why this is a "new" problem. Weren't expansion tanks failing before?
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#73
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My "guess" is 1) Maybe there was a shipment of canisters that were faulty. They all come from China so I'm not sure how you guarantee 100% quality. 2) Something new with our water system causing a problem with high pressures because we should not be seeing pressures that high at the water supply. The only way to debug this is for those who can see the pressure over 80+ psi for example, they need to turn on the water in the house and then tell us what the gauge says. If the pressure only drops a little then the high pressure is coming from the supply. If it drops a lot then it's something in the home like a bad expansion tank. |
#74
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This is my "guess" also. It's the most logical explanation. Occam's Razor.
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#75
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