There is a pipe that connects to it that same pipe goes under ground then flows to the nearest source of water. Example: Ocean, Pond, Lake. The hot water tank works as a syphon to pump the water out.
Of course there are filters in the lines so you wouldn't get nasty water some times you have to change your pipes to change the filter its very easy though and any plumber can do it.
You know they need changed when dirt, sand, small or small fish start to flow through the pipes. You will need to change your pipes if there is a strange taste coming from the faucet.
Mine comes from the local water processing and filtration plant, but this varies depending where you are, as yours may be coming straight from a river, dam, etc.; something that you don't want it to be coming from.
How far back do you want to go? Pipe in the basement. Water main in the street or from a well on your property. A water treatment plant somewhere in your city. A river, lake or underground aquifer. Rain which came from evaporation of the ocean and other standing bodies of water.
Rural water comes from a well dug on the property. City water comes from different sources depending on location. Snow melts or rain runs to a resivoir or lake, could come from a river directly. It is piped to a treatment plant to purify it and add clorine to kill bacteria. It is then run through underground pipes which branch off to each house. It come in through the basement, usually on the front side of the house or the side towards the street. Then through smaller pipes to each fixture.
Water comes to the home through pipes from the city watermain out in the street, or from your home well system. It gets to any appliance or faucet through the pipes in the home. As soon as framing is completed in any home, pipes are laid from the incoming main supply to the faucets, the H/W tank, and the toilet. another set of pipes leads from the H/W tank to each hot faucet, including the ones where washing machine and dishwasher will be. These two will end in a shut off valve where these 2 appliances can be connected easily.
If you are out in the countryside it possibly comes from your well or a common neighbourhood well. If you are in a large town or city it comes from the city reservoir or a very deep large well.
It comes from city water main or your well.
it came from a well
From a reservoir.
mostly because of rust deposits
yes turn the water off and get someone to help you put in the water faucet
If the sprayer hose screws onto the faucet, you can get a cap for that fitting. If it pushes into the faucet, I do not believe there is any plug available for that type. You have to have something on the hose fitting or water will come out when you turn the faucet on.
There was air in the line. When you turn off the water with the faucet running make sure you turn it back on with the faucet open. That will release any air caught in the lines. That faucet shut with one on a lower floor on and restoring water does not work. Fast and easy. 1. turn on affected faucet 2. shut off water 3. turn water back on 4. faucet should be running smoothly now
What you use to turn the water on or off.
no
No. It takes much more than water pressure to turn on the water faucet. At most, there is a leak if anything at all.
Turn the water off to the faucet. Remove the handle. The top of the faucet should unscrew to get to the ball valve. Replace the valve and gaskets then reassemble the faucet.
If you have an instantaneous hot water heater, and your faucet doesn't flow enough water it won't turn on the water heater. Thus requiring another faucet to be turned on.
Take the lamp faucet ring out of the package. Clean the faucet opening. Using pliers twist the lamp ring onto the opening of the faucet clockwise. Once it is tight, turn on the water. The light should be activated and the water will change colours. Turn the water off. This should turn the light off.
"Make sure you have the correct sized faucet and the correct tools. Turn off your water and then remove the existing faucet. Replace it with the new one, making sure it is sealed so that no leaks can occur when you turn your water back on."
if you look under the sink, you will probably see a cutoff valve going up to the sink faucet. turn this on. if that does not fix it, then change you faucet fixture.