Check the insulation of pipes in your home s crawl spaces and attic.
Keeping pipes from freezing in attic.
Plumber from the tels building services network can perform and execute a cold weather inspection for you to winterize pipes and keep your pipes from freezing.
Exposed pipes are most susceptible to freezing.
You can also wrap pipes in heat tape or heat cables with a thermostat control.
There are number of steps you can can take when learning how to keep pipes from freezing in the first place.
Pipes in basements or attics are not the only ones that may not be properly insulated from the cold.
Luckily the cold weather hasn t hit yet so you ve got some time to protect your home against flooding.
The best pipe insulation for your situation will depend on your home.
Heat tape or thermostatically controlled heat cables can be used to wrap pipes.
If you look up in your attic and find exposed pipes you really need to take immediate action.
Make sure the insulation on any of your exterior piping or piping that is located in the attic is in good condition and installed correctly.
Here is what you need to do.
Use heat tape on problem pipes.
Insulate pipes located in the attic and crawl space using pipe insulation even if the climate where you live does not often have hard freeze conditions.
Often inexpensive foam pipe insulation is enough for moderately cold climates.
If a span of pipe is particularly vulnerable to low temperatures electric pipe heating tape acts like an electric blanket for pipes to prevent freezing.
For severe climes opt for wrapping problem pipes with thermostatically controlled heat tape from 50 to 200 depending on length which will turn on at certain minimum temps.
Pipes that are located in areas that do not have proper insulation such as basements or attics may need extra insulation to keep from freezing.
Controlled by a thermostat to activate only when the attic temperature plunges dangerously low the tape typically consumes about 5 watts per foot.
Insulate any attic pipes that transfer water.