novocaine
Established Member
someone already gave you the best of the best idea.
heat tracing. an electrical heating element wrapped round the pipe. then insulate that.
but that's the ultimate approach. just flow it routinely with insulation, you aren't on a water meter are you? so run it for 4 minutes every 4 hours to put hot water through the pipe and warm the insulation back up. you'll only need to do it when it's sub zero and lets be honest here, thats every few years.
we hold fire water mains at 7bar with a jockey pump, to stop them freezing they are buried if possible or insulated and traced above ground (only traced if the location requires it) then flow it every few hours. one of our sites has a constant feed, there is a hose off the above ground bit that runs back to the firewater pond. we saw 10" of snow last week at that site, firewater system stayed live.
heat tracing. an electrical heating element wrapped round the pipe. then insulate that.
but that's the ultimate approach. just flow it routinely with insulation, you aren't on a water meter are you? so run it for 4 minutes every 4 hours to put hot water through the pipe and warm the insulation back up. you'll only need to do it when it's sub zero and lets be honest here, thats every few years.
we hold fire water mains at 7bar with a jockey pump, to stop them freezing they are buried if possible or insulated and traced above ground (only traced if the location requires it) then flow it every few hours. one of our sites has a constant feed, there is a hose off the above ground bit that runs back to the firewater pond. we saw 10" of snow last week at that site, firewater system stayed live.