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mtrycrafts
Seriously, I have no life.
Yes, so would the cold do that too. But, if I remember correctly, only his shower head was affected, not the other sinks in the house that had proper hot water flow. So, it is either the shower head orifices which would affect both hot and cold water equally since the two are mixed beforehand, or a pressure/temperature balancing valve, no?Because of the set-up in Phil's apartment complex all of the Tenant's hot water comes from a common boiler.
So when Phil took a shower with his restricted shower head and any other tenant called for hot water (washing clothes, showers, etc.) the water took the path of least resistance. This would be especially noticeable, the farther Phil's apartment is from that boiler.![]()
Originally Posted by Adam
Phil, when you say that you have excellent water pressure in those sinks, are you referring to hot water pressure?
Oh my bad. Actually it is both. Especially, when the water is warm.