Outside tap lost pressure

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Discussion

pinchmeimdreamin

Original Poster:

10,404 posts

233 months

Sunday 11th May
quotequote all
Our outside tap has lost all pressure over the last couple of weeks and is now just a dribble,
Tap pressure inside is fine.

The feed is straight off the cold water pipe but goes through some kind of Valve / connector that I don’t recognise which I’m guessing is the issue

Can I just replace with a standard joint or do I need to get someone in to fit a new feed ?


Ilovejapcrap

3,310 posts

127 months

Sunday 11th May
quotequote all
You can replace with standard joint. Not sure if that in picture is a broken shut off valve of a non return valve. Most of the time the outside taps have a non return valve built into them now, so you could renew that as we if it is.

miniman

28,162 posts

277 months

Sunday 11th May
quotequote all
Similar issue I had was a dud non return valve in the tap itself. Might be worth changing the tap before getting stuck into the pipe work.

Rough101

2,712 posts

90 months

Sunday 11th May
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You’ll still need a non return valve somewhere in the line to the outside tap, or an NRV equipped tap

alangla

5,655 posts

196 months

Sunday 11th May
quotequote all
miniman said:
Similar issue I had was a dud non return valve in the tap itself. Might be worth changing the tap before getting stuck into the pipe work.
This. Had to fix one of these myself this morning. Isolate the supply, get the tap off the wall and turn the supply back on. If water gushes out then it’s the tap. You’ll probably find part of the gasket on the non-return valve sticking through the valve, just push it back in to place with a small screwdriver. If that doesn’t work £9 will buy a replacement tap from Screwfix or Toolstation.

richhead

2,540 posts

26 months

Sunday 11th May
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Sorry for being thick, why does an outside tap need a non return valve when an inside one doesnt?

RotorRambler

293 posts

5 months

Monday 12th May
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richhead said:
Sorry for being thick, why does an outside tap need a non return valve when an inside one doesnt?

An outside tap needs a non-return valve (also called a check valve or backflow preventer) to prevent dirty or contaminated water from flowing back into your clean drinking water supply. This is because:
• Outside taps are often used to connect hoses, which can end up in puddles, buckets, ponds, or even chemicals like lawn feed or car wash detergents.
• If there’s a sudden drop in water pressure inside the house (e.g. a burst pipe or hydrant use), it can cause a back-siphon, where water is pulled back from the hose into the house plumbing system.

Inside taps usually don’t need one because:
• They’re typically used for clean water use only (e.g. sinks, baths), with no risk of contamination from the outlets.
• Plus, the design of taps and plumbing indoors usually already includes safeguards like air gaps (e.g. a sink overflow level) to prevent backflow.

richhead

2,540 posts

26 months

Monday 12th May
quotequote all
RotorRambler said:
richhead said:
Sorry for being thick, why does an outside tap need a non return valve when an inside one doesnt?

An outside tap needs a non-return valve (also called a check valve or backflow preventer) to prevent dirty or contaminated water from flowing back into your clean drinking water supply. This is because:
• Outside taps are often used to connect hoses, which can end up in puddles, buckets, ponds, or even chemicals like lawn feed or car wash detergents.
• If there’s a sudden drop in water pressure inside the house (e.g. a burst pipe or hydrant use), it can cause a back-siphon, where water is pulled back from the hose into the house plumbing system.

Inside taps usually don’t need one because:
• They’re typically used for clean water use only (e.g. sinks, baths), with no risk of contamination from the outlets.
• Plus, the design of taps and plumbing indoors usually already includes safeguards like air gaps (e.g. a sink overflow level) to prevent backflow.
Thank you for the explanation, and makes sense.

craig1912

3,990 posts

127 months

Monday 12th May
quotequote all
richhead said:
Sorry for being thick, why does an outside tap need a non return valve when an inside one doesnt?
It doesn’t “need” one. Ours doesn’t have one and I’m guessing many don’t but, the explanation above explains why it is advisable to have one.

Mr Pointy

12,556 posts

174 months

Monday 12th May
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craig1912 said:
richhead said:
Sorry for being thick, why does an outside tap need a non return valve when an inside one doesnt?
It doesn’t “need” one. Ours doesn’t have one and I’m guessing many don’t but, the explanation above explains why it is advisable to have one.
The water regs require check valves in any tap which can have a hose attached. It's not just advisable to fit one, it is required.

pinchmeimdreamin

Original Poster:

10,404 posts

233 months

Monday 12th May
quotequote all
Thanks all I’ll nip the tap off later and have a look beer

Bighoose

111 posts

51 months

Monday 12th May
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I had this when I used the outside tap for the the first time the other week. Googling suggested that it might be due to frost popping the small rubber washer at the back of the tap out of place and indeed it was (pictured, you can see the black washer sticking through). It was a 5 mins fix to take the tap off the wall (after isolating) and push the washer in to place, allowing the valve to open and close as it should. Pressure now back to normal and I think it only happened as I didn't drain the tap over the winter.

.

craig1912

3,990 posts

127 months

Monday 12th May
quotequote all
Mr Pointy said:
The water regs require check valves in any tap which can have a hose attached. It's not just advisable to fit one, it is required.
Yep sorry I should have said required.

I’d guess the majority of older houses don’t have one though.