Do you leave your washing machine taps on?

I might need to re-think this. Water everywhere and carpets ruined. Not me, a friend who works away.

Just spent hours swooshing water out.

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Do you leave your washing machine taps on?

our house is 3 years old we do have a drain hole in our laundry also the guest toilet

Message 11 of 37
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Do you leave your washing machine taps on?

Looks like I'll have to go and buy a bugle to keep in the laundry.

With my memory the way it is, if I don't play Taps, I might forget them.

Hardy, hardy, har!

Smiley LOL

Message 12 of 37
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Do you leave your washing machine taps on?

I have never in all my years of washing ever turned the taps off. I have also never had a problem before.

yes wouldn't it be the same as leaving the toilet tap on? it's still under pressure

Message 13 of 37
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Do you leave your washing machine taps on?


@imastawka wrote:

Nope.  Always turn them off

 

You have to pressurise them when you turn them off,

so the  pressure doesn't make them burst off the taps.

 

And that's why you turn them off, so you don't get flooded

if they burst or the rubber seals perish

 

BIL was a plumber.  Got lots of call-outs for this


I always turn my taps off....and just as well.

 

Today I forgot the washing had finished and I needed to put it in the dryer until a couple of hours later.  Went into the laundry and for the first time ever found the hot tap dripping.  It wasn't dripping when I first turned it on.

 

Is the seal the most likely problem?  I've never had this happen before.

Message 14 of 37
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Do you leave your washing machine taps on?

I think we may have all got away with it in the past.

New washing machine hoses are probably flimsy, cheap and not built to last.

Food for thought anyhow.

 

Message 15 of 37
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Do you leave your washing machine taps on?

It's the hoses bursting off the taps that is the problem.

 

If your taps aren't turned off, then the water gushes straight out of

the taps all over the floor.

 

Toilet is different, Harley.  The tap is not connected with a rubber hose,

but a pipe.  

 

Zanadoo, I would suggest it's a washer.   Make sure you get one

that is specifically for hot water

 

Ten teeny you're right.    Probably cheap and nasty hoses to save money

 

That'll be $350 thanks     big grin smiley.gif

Message 16 of 37
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Do you leave your washing machine taps on?

Thanks Stawks. I think the hose split. Was squirting out the side. (Still attached..) Could heve been days as he works week on, week off.

My shoulders are sore, arms too. We had towels, mops and buckets. Was a bit hard to know where to start. 3/4 of the house affected ๐Ÿ˜ž

Message 17 of 37
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Do you leave your washing machine taps on?

Lest ye forget.........secure the dishwasher/undersink  taps, too.............Oh, and my toilet water sources are nylon/rubber hoses too.

Message 18 of 37
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Do you leave your washing machine taps on?

If you have a room with wet carpet on one half--wet the other half before drying.

 

This stops a ..high tide line appearing..................works.................................Richo.

Message 19 of 37
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Do you leave your washing machine taps on?


@ten*teeny*tiny*toes wrote:

I do have a question tho. Quite a new house. The only drain hole was the bathroom. Do laundries need them?

In the floor,I mean?


Stawka's BIL will know positively....

 

But I think no floorgrate is necessary if the floor is sloped towards an exterior door of the laundry room.

 

Smelly, mouldy carpet.  YUK. Sometimes even the underlay develops a stink

 

Gosh, even moisture could have got into the gyprock.

 

Will be interested to know  an insurance company's  response to a claim.

 

DEB

 

'

 

 

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