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		|  12-10-2016, 11:40 AM | #1 |  
	| Franchise Player | 
				 Plumbing Issue 
 
			
			So it seems that the cold water supply line to my washing machine has quit working.
 I was having issues with my front load machine showing an error message, so I had an appliance repair guy in and he disconnected the cold water line and if you open the tap there is no water coming out of the spigot.
 
 My laundry room is upstairs, and given the weather I figure perhaps the line froze, so I open up the wall cavity and it is nice and warm in there with no signs of frost.
 
 I looked at the lines in the basement, and of course they in a difficult spot to access, but I can feel them with my hand and there does not appear to be any cold spots.  I tried going on long the line and tapping with with a hammer and still no cold water at the laundry tap.
 
 My house is plumbed with pex.  It is like there is a blockage in the line somewhere, or perhaps the tap is siezed in a closed position.
 
 Anyone ever run into this?
 
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		|  12-10-2016, 11:46 AM | #2 |  
	| Franchise Player | 
 
			
			Oh and just to confirm, no, I have not stood on the machine or the plumbing
		 
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		|  12-10-2016, 11:49 AM | #3 |  
	| Monster Storm 
				 
				Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Calgary      | 
 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by Northendzone  Oh and just to confirm, no, I have not stood on the machine or the plumbing |  
well I'm out of ideas
		 
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		|  12-10-2016, 11:51 AM | #4 |  
	| Franchise Player 
				 
				Join Date: Apr 2003 Location: Not sure      | 
 
			
			That is indeed puzzling. The wall you opened up, it's an interior wall yes?
		 
				 Last edited by GoinAllTheWay; 12-10-2016 at 11:53 AM.
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		|  12-10-2016, 11:54 AM | #5 |  
	| Lifetime Suspension | 
 
			
			I don't see how a shutoff valve could fail and not allow any water through when you turn it does it feel normal? Most likely explanation to me would be a frozen line but I'm no plumber.
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		|  12-10-2016, 11:56 AM | #6 |  
	| First Line Centre | 
 
			
			Drink lots of water
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		|  12-10-2016, 12:55 PM | #7 |  
	| Monster Storm 
				 
				Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Calgary      | 
 
			
			When you opened the wall was the plumbing on the inside or outside of the vapor barrier?  I've seen this screwed up before
		 
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		|  12-10-2016, 02:02 PM | #8 |  
	| Franchise Player | 
 
			
			The wall where the water lines are is a stub wall.  No vapour barrier in there at all.  No frost in area either.  I also had a 1500 watt heater blowing in the area for a couple of hours
 Cold and after valve feels a little stiffer to turn.  I am going to call a plumber on monday
 
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		|  12-10-2016, 02:29 PM | #9 |  
	| Lifetime Suspension | 
 
			
			Can the shut off valve be disassembled? I'm guess it is a handle type (think they are called a ball valve) which is not designed to be serviced or repaired.
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		|  12-11-2016, 09:37 AM | #10 |  
	| Franchise Player | 
 
			
			I don't believe the valve could be disassembled.  It is like a tap.
		 
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		|  12-11-2016, 12:09 PM | #11 |  
	| Scoring Winger | 
 
			
			I am having a similar problem, except it is the toilet and faucet in the basement washroom that won't receive cold water (upstairs works normally). 
 I was thinking a pipe froze as well but haven't been able to confirm (or exclude) that is the case yet.
 
 I did make sure to check the water meter to verify that the pipe wasn't burst and leaking elsewhere, which thankfully appears to be the case.
 
 I am very interested in your solution and if I uncover anything I will circle back.
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		|  12-11-2016, 01:36 PM | #12 |  
	| Franchise Player | 
 
			
			No real solution as the problem fixed itself as it is all working now.
 Put some foam pipe cozy around the pipes, and insulated the void in the stub wall.  I will cover over the hole I cut in the wall with plastic covers for a cold air return and will stuff the void in my basenent where the water line runs with more insulation.
 
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		|  12-12-2016, 07:25 AM | #14 |  
	| Franchise Player 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2015 Location: Pickle Jar Lake      | 
 
			
			Interesting, I had always assumed PEX would be more resilient to cold.
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		|  12-12-2016, 11:59 AM | #15 |  
	| Franchise Player | 
 
			
			Whatever the issue was, it is now back and I have no water at the spigots for my washing machine.
 I have a plumber coming in tomorrow, because the way I see it, I need to start cutting plumbing lines, and I don't want to get into the point of no return and create a massive mess of water..  seems to me that main floor washing machines are a pain.
 
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		|  12-12-2016, 12:10 PM | #16 |  
	| Franchise Player 
				 
				Join Date: Apr 2003 Location: Not sure      | 
 
			
			Please don't forget to update this post when you find the cause, I've been trying to think of what could cause this since you first posted.
 If this line is on an exterior wall, the only cause I could think of was freezing but I assumed waterlines on exterior walls was against code?
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		|  12-12-2016, 12:30 PM | #17 |  
	| Franchise Player | 
 
			
			My water lines run up from the basement via a stub wall that is against walls to my garage and outside.  I opened up the stub wall and found no evidence of frost in stub wall cavity, not could I find a cold area of the lex pipe.
 Right now I am thinking that perhaps, the taps at the end of the water lines are packed with crap, and potentially sealed off.
 
 I could cut them and then reinstall new taps whoich would be joined to a new length of pex; however, I don't want to dick around with this, so I am going to wait and have a pro look at it.
 
 I will update tomorrow.
 
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		|  12-13-2016, 04:34 PM | #18 |  
	| My face is a bum! | 
 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by Northendzone  I will update tomorrow. |    
Inquiring minds!
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		|  12-13-2016, 05:05 PM | #19 |  
	| First Line Centre 
				 
				Join Date: Apr 2004 Location: Boxed-in      | 
 
			
			I recently had a line (to an outside hose) that would run fine for a while, and then just suddenly sieze up and shut off.  I never found the root cause, but it resolved itself every time after closing the shutoff valve for a while and then re-opening it.  I assumed there was a loose chunk of solder in there (or something) else that jammed in the shutoff valve, and only worked its way out after the pressure was released.  Or maybe a defective washer in the valve that somehow got jammed closed by the flowing water.
 Moral of the story: don't install cheap shutoff valves.
 
 Good luck with yours!
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		|  12-13-2016, 05:08 PM | #20 |  
	| Franchise Player | 
 
			
			It would take a lot to perfectly seal off a supply line (say if solder did break off in your case). There shouldn't be any sources or debris in the lines anyways. 
 Thinking it is some issue with a shut off; either by defect (ie on failure some valves default to closed), or by user error (did you shut off a cold line thinking it was an outside tap? But actually its your washer?)..
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