Usually it only does this if you were recently running hot water in a nearby faucet. I've seen this happen when the water heater is in the basement below the fixture in question and no water has been drawn at any fixture for a little while. After about an hour of no use, go down to the heater and feel the cold water line where it enters the heater. Is it warm or hot? How far up the cold water line is it warm? To a tee? Bingo. You need a "heat trap" to keep the heat from rising up the cold line. Repipe the cold line with a flex connector that turns 180 degrees back toward the heater then 90 degrees to horizontal (looks like a question mark).
Seems as if something got into your water supply. May be some kind of contamination If it comes out clear but turns redish brown when left exposed to the air it is probably clear iron. That is iron that is fully disolved in the water but which oxidises when left exposed to air. If it is coming out of the tap brown then it could be a number of things. You probably want to get it analysed unless you can isolate the cause!
This occurs when your hot water heater is either broken, disconnected, or has exhausted its supply of heated water. In cold weather, heated water may be cooling in the pipes on the way to the faucet, especially when it has just been turned on.
The faucet is either broken and the inside parts are not turning with the handle or there is a blockage in the supply line.
just very cold water,just ice cold water,also needed when making pie crusts,cold temperature helps with the consistency
Because the air could have a lot of water vapor in the air and that could make it very humid and hot or on a cold day when the water vapor is comming down it will snow, or when it's warm/kinda cold it could come down as rain.
Nope, no acid when water freezes, the water freezes by the very cold air turning cold water and cold air makes ice. It's like a recipe!
because when winter comes around then the water gets cold and frozen and polar means very cold..
Mars is very cold because it is farther from the sun than other planets.
Are you talking about pipes under a slab here? If so you probably have a hot water line under the slab leaking that is heating the water in the cold line.
Grease stains clothes it is very difficult to get out, if it will come out at all.
In fact hot water freezes quicker in a cold climate, because of the sudden temperature change. If you want to test it for yourself, take two ice trays, fill one with cold water and one with very hot water, stick them in the freezer, and see that the hot water freezes quicker.
cold very cold
freeze
Cold water. It doesn't have to cool as much as hot water does, thus it freezes faster. Under VERY specific labratory conditions, it can be made possible to have warmer water freeze faster, however, these conditions will not be present when you fill your ice tray. If you want ice, use cold water.
Water is at its greatest density at 4 oC.
If you heat up aluminum and then place it in cold water it can dissolve.
It becomes Spring! Because no matter how much snow falls spring will come!
She will, yes.
just very cold water,just ice cold water,also needed when making pie crusts,cold temperature helps with the consistency
Yes.