The toilet on the second floor broke a hose for six hours water leak in the house flooded on the way down to the garage and got the car :flame: now to deal with the insurance companies
Sorry to hear that happened.....
That sucks, good luck with the insurance companies.
Friend of mine was on vacation, him and his wife decided to come home a day earlier than planned. Walked into the same thing. The little hose from the wall to the toilet ruptured. Thankfully the flood had not yet spread to the rest of the house.
I'm assuming the 'Bird's windows were down.
Sorry to hear about that! Good luck with the clean up and repairs/restorations
The windows were down
Quote from: PettyMower on August 19, 2016, 12:38:48 PM
Friend of mine was on vacation, him and his wife decided to come home a day earlier than planned. Walked into the same thing. The little hose from the wall to the toilet ruptured. Thankfully the flood had not yet spread to the rest of the house.
I'm assuming the 'Bird's windows were down.
If i'm away for more than a week I turn the water off in the house.
Bill, so sorry to hear. Hope it all works out for you.
Quote from: billssuperbird on August 19, 2016, 12:01:45 PM
The toilet on the second floor broke a hose for six hours water leak in the house flooded on the way down to the garage and got the car :flame: now to deal with the insurance companies
Oh no, I hope your Insurance Co. give you what you need to make things right. What type/design of little hose broke?
Quote from: kpkube on August 19, 2016, 04:00:41 PM
Quote from: PettyMower on August 19, 2016, 12:38:48 PM
Friend of mine was on vacation, him and his wife decided to come home a day earlier than planned. Walked into the same thing. The little hose from the wall to the toilet ruptured. Thankfully the flood had not yet spread to the rest of the house.
I'm assuming the 'Bird's windows were down.
If i'm away for more than a week I turn the water off in the house.
Yup....same here. We live out in the country, and have a well. So it's a simple flip of a breaker.
The supply line to the toilet tank plastic screw cap
To the tank broke
That sucks. My guess is the blame can be laid on cheap Chinese crap.
That sucks! Something similar happened to a relative. I always turn the water off to the house when we go away, because of this. My cousin had a solenoid crack in her dishwasher when they went away during the winter. They cam home to a glacier out of their front door.
I heard the same story from a crossing guard at my child's school several years ago, went away for a week and came back to a flooded house, ruined carpets, etc. It is even worse down in Florida here because as soon as you have water you've got mold following.
Another time I was almost asleep and heard a strange noise, got up and just couldn't figure out where it was coming from until I went in the bathroom, and under the sink in the cabinet the water was shooting out, and in just a few minutes the floor had started to get flooded. Luckily it didn't even get the carpet wet.
So yes, if we're ever away the little shutoff valves are always shut. It is especially to do the hot water ones, as it seems 99% chance it is the hot water side. One other problem is that if you never turn them, in 15 years when something does happen, you'll never be able to get the water quickly shut off, you'll have to go to the main shutoff, if you even know where that is. And the valve for my house is outside and really needs a special tool to turn. Also, for the washing machine, people really need the higher quality stainless lines, not the cheap ones that eventually develop a crack/leak in them.
Of course in this situation it sounds like it was just something that happened while somebody was away at work.
One other detail, I'm not sure why the windows were down, as I would think people would be keeping them up to keep out any stray mice or bugs.
aww noo sorry to hear this , :icon_smile_blackeye: , hope you get it sorted soon
When there is no one home the main will be shut off. This won't happen to me again :2thumbs:
Damn, sorry to hear this. I hope your 'Bird isn't too badly damaged.
That happened to my boss a few years ago. They had left on a two week vacation around Christmas & the line on an upstairs toilet broke. It ruined 90% of the bottom floor of the house, including the garage ceiling. He lost a ton of valuable items & heirlooms.
Nowdays, he shuts off the water main, plus the breaker box & the gas!
Sorry to hear Bill!
It'll be interesting to see how the insurance company values the car damage.
I'd assume a real Bird has one value and a cloned car another.
But, if the damage would be seats and carpet, for example, that should be the same for either,
since those parts aren't unique to a real Bird.
In any event, Good Luck. Don't let them screw you...
So far to looks like just D/P side boor panels and carpet will need replaced. The car cover is not covered. How do you wash them
Have several of these placed under toilets, sinks, dishwasher, behind the refridgerator.
(http://www.homedepot.com/catalog/productImages/400/45/454c712b-35f6-4101-b702-c669327e6053_400.jpg)
Quote from: billssuperbird on August 22, 2016, 05:15:10 AM
So far to looks like just D/P side boor panels and carpet will need replaced. The car cover is not covered. How do you wash them
I take mine to the local laundromat they have commercial heavy duty washers and dryers there that can handle a big load like the car cover. Sorry to hear about the leak
Quote from: billssuperbird on August 22, 2016, 05:15:10 AM
How do you wash them
Be sure to use Dreft, or Dreft for Babies. It's the gentlest laundry cleaner, and rinses clean.
You don't want to use an everyday detergent, and have any residue left in the material. It can then damage your paint by "leaking" from the cover to the paint.
Quote from: billssuperbird on August 20, 2016, 07:32:06 AM
The supply line to the toilet tank plastic screw cap
To the tank broke
My guess is the seam around the radius of the lower end of the plastic ballcock nut split.
Everybody keep this in mind, if you leave your house for an extended period of time (your Insurance Co. sets this period) and a pipe breaks, your Insurance could be Voided. This depends on your Insurance Co. policy's fine print calling it an 'Unoccupied dwelling.'
On the grounds that if someone had been checking in or living there, there would be less damage.
I've used 'Flood Stop' piped in to the main line and wired the house up. But better yet like others mentioned "Close the main when out of the house overnight." https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1yRQdFjQqrU
http://reliancedetection.com/products/selection-guide/
Shit. Same damn thing happened to me today. Half of my house is soaked. :brickwall:
70 RR 4speed bench seat black need new carpet and D/P boor panels anyone have any new stuff they my wanna get rid of. Let me know thanks :buff:
Quote from: billssuperbird on August 23, 2016, 08:41:48 AM
70 RR 4speed bench seat black need new carpet and D/P boor panels anyone have any new stuff they my wanna get rid of. Let me know thanks :buff:
Are those the only things you need?
For now yes
Really sorry to hear this ! Hope the insurance co. treats you right! My home is a 1-story abode and this would be very unlikely to happen here as far as my Charger is concerned. However, a flooded home with everything ruined while I am away is a possibility that scares the He## out of me!
Again, really sorry this happened to you and let's hope the insurance company does the right thing!
If you are building a house, best thing to ensure you have is a drain in the floor that leads off the toilet, i.e. the laundry or bathroom. That way, it can flood all it wants, it's all just going down the drain and into the stormwater.
Makes life easier if you have a laundry spill or overflow in the tub or you have a door there that leads outside and people drag mud into the house. Just throw a bucket of water at it and down the drain it goes.
I would add make sure the floor drain also has a one way valve. Stormwater backing up the floor drain is not fun either. :flame:
Quote from: dual fours on August 23, 2016, 12:14:05 AM
Quote from: billssuperbird on August 20, 2016, 07:32:06 AM
The supply line to the toilet tank plastic screw cap
To the tank broke
My guess is the seam around the radius of the lower end of the plastic ballcock nut split.
Everybody keep this in mind, if you leave your house for an extended period of time (your Insurance Co. sets this period) and a pipe breaks, your Insurance could be Voided. This depends on your Insurance Co. policy's fine print calling it an 'Unoccupied dwelling.'
On the grounds that if someone had been checking in or living there, there would be less damage.
I've used 'Flood Stop' piped in to the main line and wired the house up. But better yet like others mentioned "Close the main when out of the house overnight." https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1yRQdFjQqrU
http://reliancedetection.com/products/selection-guide/
Okay, you guys are getting me a little worried. I think I'd better be proactive & replace those items on both toilets in my house soon! The house is currently 17 years old & both bathrooms are upstairs.
Change the hose and the shut off valve I did on all 3 of my bathrooms. And make sure you can get to the main shutoff valve fast and easy.and the hole Family knows how to do it :2thumbs: oh yeah and don't over tighten the plastic screw cap To the tank and only tighten it by hand.
It looks like Haggerty it's going to take care of me. Is there any discount code out there so I can get new interior