What a scary, expensive last couple of days! It all started early Friday morning. I work weekends, (12 hour shifts Friday, Saturday, and Sunday), and then I'm off all week. I get up early on my workdays because I start a 4:45 AM. Melanie and I were sitting in the living room around 3:15 AM when she said to me, "I hear water running". I told her I had the sprinkler system set to go on at 3:00. So we both dismissed it. I couldn't hear it because I'm deaf in one ear, and only have about 75% hearing in the other ear.
Then I called her at home on my morning break on Saturday and she told me I really hear water running in the laundry room and in the guest bathroom. She said nothing was leaking, but when she was on her hands and knees feeling behind the toilet to see if anything was wet, she said the
floor was HOT! I told her as long as nothing was leaking I would take a look when I got home.
She was right, no leaks, but even I could hear it with my crappy ears. I have one of those "point and shoot" Infrared thermometers, and the linoleum floor behind the toilet was
101 degrees! I turned off the hot water at the water heater and it stopped. I knew then, 1.) I had a hot water leak. 2.) it was in the underground pipes.
Here in Arizona we have some of the best climate in the United States, but some of the WORST home construction as well. Most all homes are built on slabs with all of the piping run under the slab before they pour it. What happened to me actually is quite common. 80% of underground leaks are hot water because of the expansion and contraction of the pipes as they heat up and cool down. If the pipe is rubbing against anything, this will cause it to leak over time.
Bottom line: yesterday they had to repipe my entire house with hot water. They ran new lines overhead in the attic, and down the walls. $5,000.00 later the problem was solved, and now I've got a drywall guy coming tomorrow to, "make it all look like it never happened." In the process I had them replace 2 faucets as well as my outside main water shut off valve. Oh the joys of home ownership. All in all it's pretty amazing at what they can do. I had no idea this type of thing could be done so fast. It sure as hell beats jackhammering your floor to pieces! It's another grand for the drywall to be replaced, taped, textured, and painted. I guess I can't complain, it's better than losing the whole joint in an earthquake. Bill T.




