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Outside Faucet Cover for Freezing Weather


Bronze Post Medal for All Time! 213 Posts

All you need are styrofoam cups, an empty 2 liter pop bottle and tape. We are in a big cold snap right now and my local Home Depot was sold out of faucet covers, so I came up with an even better idea.

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I took three large styrofoam cups (20 oz. size from the $1 store) and stacked them all together inside of each other. I then cut off the top lips of the top 2 cups so the cups were no taller than the bottom cup. These go on to the spout first and if you like, you can just tape these cups on to the faucet and leave it at that.

For added protection, I cut the bottom half off of a 2 liter pop bottle and put this over the cups. In between the cups and the bottle-bottom, I put quilt batting for extra insulation, but you could also use fiberglass insulation, spray in foam or even just a rag.

Lastly, I duct taped this to the side of my house. I bet you could also drill a hole and uses zip-ties to secure it.

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Bronze Feedback Medal for All Time! 167 Feedbacks
December 19, 20080 found this helpful

Ingenious idea! I wish I'd read this before buying a faucet cover for $3-4!

 
By Harry (Guest Post)
December 19, 20080 found this helpful

When my outdoor faucet froze and sprunk a leak I went to a hardware store and bought a new outdoor faucet especially made for cold weather. The pipe is about a foot long that is attached to the faucet. The valve is located in the long pipe so when installed the shut off valve is well inside the cellar.

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Now It doesn't matter how cold is gets outside the faucet never freezes. If you have soldered pipes before you can do this job yourself.

 
December 19, 20080 found this helpful

Another way to prevent the pipe from freezing is to find the shutoff valve. We were terrified that our outdoor faucet was going to blow because it seemed to have sprung a leak that left us with a small glacier attached to the back of our house after the first real freeze. (It's also a frost-proof faucet like Harry's above) I poked around a bit and found that just inside our wall (in our mudroom with exposed pipes, but it could be just inside your basement wall) there was a shutoff valve.

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This prevents water from getting close to the outdoors where it can be disastrous. It gets way too cold here for faucet covers to work, so this was a lifesaver.

 

Silver Feedback Medal for All Time! 337 Feedbacks
December 30, 20080 found this helpful

Here in Sask we all must have faucets that are frost proof, because no one does anything special at all, and no one has any problems. The temp goes to -40 or lower, so if things were going to freeze up, they would certainly do so. I have 2 outdoor taps. I just disconnect the hose, and shut it off. In a former house, I had an outside tap that had hot water, and one year I used it to flood a rink for my kids. No problems at all.

 

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