That often goes overlooked—home plumbing maintenance. Little problems, if not dealt with, can mushroom into something big and expensive. Take a leaky faucet, for instance. A faucet that drips at the rate of one drop per second will waste 2,700 gallons of water in a year. Drip times five or ten. Heaven only knows how many drops get wasted while we’re scrubbing our pearly whites or giving the lovey-dovey lather-and-rinse treatment to our hair (that’s up to 118 gallons for some folks, and we’re not naming names). In my 23 years as a plumbing technician, I’ve installed and repaired just about every type of faucet. I’ve never met one that wasn’t made of enough metal and plastic to be recycled. conclusión: Check your faucets, people. Then, make downstairs to wherever your water heater hangs out and look up and down and all around it. Check for leaks. Then do the same upstairs (scroll).
Apart from saving money, the regular maintenance of a plumbing system contributes to the comfort and safety of the people who live in a space. Clean pipes provide consistent water pressure and quality, which are necessary for the normal daily activities most of us take for granted. That is, unless we have experienced a plumbing disaster. Inspections, routine or otherwise, can also catch problems before they manifest in ways that will really inconvenience or endanger us. For instance, mold growth in wall cavities may not be something we want to think about. Yet, if there's any place in our lives where space and duct humidity control should ensure an environment free of the stuff, it's in our bathrooms. Our homes should also be free of corroded pipes, which might be a health risk.
At the end, having a system under regular observation can bring two kinds of dividends. One is available now, and it’s called peace of mind. The other may be beneficial in the future: intensified environmental efforts may pay off in plumbing systems that are much more efficient and much less wasteful. Water conservation is paramount to sustainable living, and these plumbing systems have an enormous effect at both the micro-level (the household) and the macro-level (the community). The fixes that plumbing professionals make when they make plumbing system observations can really make a difference on the order of conserving gallons here and there over a week. That's good. But what kind of good are we talking about? Professional plumbing is a positive influence here by helping save energy and water. When plumbing systems are tightly monitored and tightly fixed, water-efficient systems work, and more energy-efficient systems work better.