
ET
Dec 8, 2002, 1:00 PM
Post #5 of 14
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Re: [Rolly] House Project Update for 7 December 02
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The water tanks are connected to the water supply all the time. The in-flow is controlled by a float. The pressure in the city mains is often not sufficient to raise the water to the second story roof level during peak demand periods -- most of the day -- but there is enough pressure at night. I take it that backflow prevention into the city's system is mainly handled by the cistern being filled from the top so there's an air gap? I've been told that the lack of water pressure, the pressure cycling in the system, and the lack of backflow prevention in general (not that the US is all that much better in the latter aspect) is why municipal water systems are considered to be contaminated, rather than any problems (post filtration and treatment) at or before the treatment plant. Are the pressure pumps you're talking about the air pressurized water tanks (they always seem to come from the factory painted sky blue) used in the US, or something different?
I too have wondered why the water tanks are black -- cheaper to make I guess. And yes, the "cold" water does get pretty warm which reduces the demand on the water heater in the summer. In fact among my friends in Manzanillo, not a one has a water heater. Several people I know here in Lerdo also do not have heaters. I once made the comment that I like a hot shower even in the summer. When I think about it, in line with potentially contaminated water supplies, you'd want your water tank to be opaque to inhibit algal growth, and black is probably a lot easier of a color to achieve in a plastic than the other aesthetically neutral option, white (plus can you imagine what you'd see if you looked inside a white water tank after a few months use?). As for our fetish for hot showers (and in my case, hot baths even in 100 degree weather), mi novia, una Mexicana, has stuck her hand into the shower on more than one ocassion and declined to join in announcing "I'm not a chicken, for god's sake....". With regards to surveying and dimensional errors, although some others who frequent the Mexconnect forums would probably sum them up as "that's Mexico", this is by no means unique or Mexico related. Last week a friend recounted the latest sins of a large US construction company who in the process of building a large commercial structure he's overseeing, most recently screwed up by mispositioning the bolts embedded into the foundations, requiring that the structural steel be sent back to the factory for redrilling of the base plates (after engineering analysis to verify that this wouldn't substantially weaken the plates). Then to catch up on a severely screwed up crane schedule triggered by the reworking of the steel, the contractor had all the steel set at once, even on foundations that had been poured a scant 48 hours earlier. And then there's the large government facility who a few years back, ran a multi-million dollar cost overrun when their acre-sized floor slab ended up an inch too high.....
(This post was edited by ET on Dec 8, 2002, 1:04 PM)
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