Shut off the water supply and unscrew the cast iron upper part off of the hydrant, then withdraw the mechanism/rod "upward", I'll GUESS it's not going to be 10+ feet long like they need to be here!My hydrant leaks from time to time and needs repaired. I know there are repair parts available but have never taken one apart,what is involved?? I tried to post a picture but my phone says the file is too large, never had that happen before.
Ha, idiot proof?So.....it turns out after reading down through this thread "freeze proof' is not synonymous with 'idiot proof' some of us (me) will never be too old to learn.
I’m glad I’m not the only one who has had to bend one although mine are from running into them bent over the whole thing pipe and all. Once hit one with an 8 row planter straightened it out it would function but I broke the handle luckily I had one to rob a handle off.Ha, idiot proof?
When I bought this place the old fellow had a hole started just outside the milkhouse where he intended to install a new hydrant he bought. I got the bright idea to install it inside. I was able to incorporate the milkhouse drain with the bottom of the hydrant so drain back was no issue. It was handy having running water inside as the old milkhouse was auxiliary to my shop. Over time I adjusted it, but eventually ordered a couple of new seals for the bottom end. Then I went to disassemble it. Couldn't withdraw the rod as it hit the ceiling! As I recall, I finally bent the rod to get it out. Then I went to the work of straightening it, cut it in two, threaded the ends, and got a deep nut to couple them back together. It wasn't too much later the old underground system sprung a leak, and all of the underground water line was abandoned. It was a complicated system and parts of it had already been repaired and/or abandoned. The pump is still functional in the pit in the old barn foundation. Now my access is with a hose.
I dug up my hydrant and replaced it because it leaked in the winter and the riser pipe froze and broke.My hydrant leaks from time to time and needs repaired. I know there are repair parts available but have never taken one apart,what is involved?? I tried to post a picture but my phone says the file is too large, never had that happen before.
My 2 cents is to start early with all the above advice so there's still enough daylight left to get a plumber out after you've got the hydrant in pieces and realize you still don't know how to fix it or put back together for the night.
Also if you didn’t realize this if it has been leaking out of the spigot you have also been leaking water below ground out of the drain back valve saturating the earth around the gravel “drain back” bed. When you open the hydrant lever the drain back port is closed so the water flowing past the on-off valve to flow out of the hydrant is not feeding a stream of water out of the drain back port. When you close the hydrant lever the drain back port is opened to allow drain back to keep the hydrant stand pipe water free so it will not freeze. But if the supply stop valve does not seal water leaks past it and out of the drain back port. If the leak rate is high enough more water than the drain back port can flow fills the stand pipe and starts flowing/dripping from the spigot.
Freeze proof hydrant video
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