Some towns and cities in the UK are allowed but there is still restrictions in some, depends on where you live.
It's when your water company says you are not allowed to use a hose pipe because of shortage of water.
Hose pipes are allowed in East Anglia however there may be bans on their use during drought.
The best way to clean a plastic hose for a fish tank is to use pipe cleaners, depending on the width of the interior tube you may be able to use a rag as a pipe cleaner type tool and just spin the rag through the hose until it is clean.
There are no hoses that do this. There is only copper pipe, galvanized pipe, or PVC normally use in a home water supply.
One way is to use a water hose and go on the roof to the drain vent pipe(not sure on its name). Form a good seal with hands around water hose and pipe. It maybe necessary to plug off some sink drains in the house to get a good seal. The water from the hose should flow freely down the pipe if there is no problem. If it backs up (from the clog) try running the water hose till it unclogs.
i believe the pressure does not change but the volume of water you will be able to use will be less
i asume your talking about the trans coolent return line/s these r easy just cut back to repairable line _______ _________ then rubber hose it with two clamps on each end now remember to use a pipe or line cutter to reduse metal chips but u can always use the old hack saw
Yes, this is alright as long as the hose from the washer doesn't fit tightly into the pipe. There has to be a little room for air to get in so that the drain will vent.
A couple large hose clamps and a peice of inner tube or you can use same diameter pipe and clamp in between where the split is. If it's hard plastic maybe bondo or a fibreglass patch.
if it's plastic pipe you can just buy a glue cap and glue it on. If it's galvanized or cast iron pipe you can use a gym cap, (arubber cap that comes with a hose clamp). Just put that on the pipe and tighten it down firmly. this will prevent any sewer gas from coming out of the drain.
If it is a pressure pipe, you would reduce the plastic down to the copper pipes size with reducer fittings and then use one to go to copper. If a waste line and the difference is not too great, you can use a rubber coupling that is the right size on each end and held on with hose clamps.
For a tempory fix, use duck tape, or splice it somehow with a short peice of pipe and a couple of hose clamps. The best way to fix it though is to buy a new one.