What Queens Plumber Wishes Every Homeowner Knew Before Winter

WhatsApp Channel Join Now
10 things that your plumber wishes you knew

A buddy of mine bought a row house in Sunnyside about three years ago. First winter he owned it, he wakes up one Saturday in late January and turns on the kitchen faucet. Nothing. Tries the bathroom. Nothing. Figured maybe the city was doing work on the main, so he calls 311 – no outages reported. Calls his neighbor – water’s fine next door. That’s when it clicked.

He goes down to the basement and finds a copper pipe along the outside wall that’s frozen stiff. Grabbed a hair dryer, started heating it up. Bad idea. The pipe thawed out, and the second it did, a joint that the ice had cracked open started spraying water everywhere. Now he’s standing in his basement watching it flood and he has no clue where the shutoff valve is. He’s opening cabinets, looking behind the water heater, pulling stuff off shelves – nothing.

He ended up calling Queens Plumber while water was still spraying. They’re at 53-05 108th St, Corona, NY 11368. Somebody picked up right away and walked him through finding the shutoff over the phone – turned out it was behind a piece of plywood that the previous owner had nailed over a utility access. He got the water stopped before the truck even showed up. The Plumber got there maybe forty-five minutes later, cut out the cracked section, put in new copper, wrapped the whole exposed run in insulation, and before he left he walked my buddy through everything he should be doing before next winter so this wouldn’t happen again.

Because my buddy was home that morning and picked up the phone fast, the damage stayed small. He got lucky. If that pipe had burst on a Monday while he was at work, the basement would’ve been under a foot of water by the time he got home. I think about that story every year around October when the weather starts turning, because most people in Queens don’t do a single thing to get their plumbing ready for the cold. They just wait and hope nothing breaks.

Where Queens Houses Fall Apart in the Cold

Newer homes handle winter fine. The pipes are run through insulated interior walls, the materials are modern, the whole system is built with cold weather in mind. Queens houses – a lot of them, anyway – were not built that way. Row houses in Woodside, semi-detached places in College Point, older builds in Long Island City – these homes have pipes running through spots that get cold fast. Basement walls with no insulation, crawl spaces that are basically outside, exterior walls where whatever insulation was there forty years ago has long since broken down. Some of these garages don’t even have heat registers – a pipe running through one of those is about as protected as a pipe sitting on the sidewalk.

When a real cold snap hits – not just a chilly day, but one of those stretches where it drops into the single digits overnight – those pipes are sitting in below-freezing air for hours. Water inside them expands as it freezes, and when it expands enough, something gives. Usually a joint or a fitting, sometimes the pipe itself. And once it thaws, you’ve got a crack or a split that turns into a geyser.

Queens Plumber does a lot of winterization work in the fall for exactly this reason. Wrapping exposed pipes in foam insulation, adding heat tape to runs that sit in bad spots, and in some cases rerouting a line that’s been freezing every winter because the original builder ran it in a dumb location. That kind of work costs a couple hundred bucks. A burst pipe and the water damage that follows can run you well into five figures depending on how long the water ran and what it soaked into.

Boiler Problems Start in October, Not December

Queens runs on boilers. Most of the country heats with forced air, but in Queens the older housing stock is almost entirely hot water radiators or baseboard fed by a boiler in the basement. And boilers need to be looked at before you need them, not after they stop working.

Every fall, Queens Plumber starts fielding calls from people who flipped on their heat for the first time and got a surprise. One common one – the heat turns on and the radiator pipes start making a racket like somebody’s banging on them with a wrench. Nine times out of ten that’s air stuck in the lines because nobody bled the system before firing it up. Easy fix if you know what you’re doing, confusing and loud if you don’t. Another one they hear a lot – the boiler kicks on fine but half the radiators in the house stay ice cold. Usually means a circulator pump gave out during the summer when nobody was paying attention, or a zone valve got stuck shut.

All of this gets caught with a fall boiler tune-up. Queens Plumber comes through and goes over the whole system – burner, heat exchanger, radiators, pressure, safety controls – the works. They bleed the air out, make sure everything fires right, and basically hand you back a boiler that’s ready to run all winter without surprises. That visit costs way less than an emergency boiler call on a Friday night in December when every plumber in the borough is backed up two days and your tenant is freezing.

And if the boiler is old enough that you’re spending more on repairs every year than a new one would cost you over time, they’ll have that conversation with you straight. They’d rather tell you the truth about a dying unit than keep billing you to patch something that’s on its way out. They do boiler installs across Queens – small residential units in Fresh Meadows, multi-zone setups in three-family buildings over in Astoria – and the quote they give you is the number you pay.

The Valve That Could Save Your House

Queens Plumber brings this up with almost every homeowner they work with and I’m going to repeat it because it matters – do you know where your main water shutoff is? Not kind of. Not “I think it’s somewhere in the basement.” Can you walk to it right now and turn it off?

In a lot of the older Queens houses, the shutoff is in the basement near where the water line comes in from the street. But in plenty of homes it’s somewhere you’d never think to look. Behind a shelf full of paint cans. On the other side of a finished wall that the previous owner drywalled over without leaving a panel. One guy I know found his behind a washing machine that hadn’t been moved since 2006. And in some of the really old places, the valve itself is so corroded and seized up that even if you find it, good luck getting it to turn.

Queens Plumber has gotten to burst pipe calls where the homeowner spent twenty minutes tearing the basement apart looking for the shutoff while water poured out of the wall. By the time the truck showed up, the damage was already done. The floor was soaked, the finished ceiling in the room below was wrecked, a bunch of stuff they had stored down there was ruined. Enough water had gotten into the walls that they were looking at a mold problem on top of everything else. Twenty minutes of water running free did all of that.

Getting a new shutoff valve put in – or just having someone find your existing one, test it, and clear the path to it – takes about an hour and barely costs anything. When you think about what even a short flood does to a house, there’s no cheaper insurance a plumber can offer you.

Deal With It Now, Not in January

Queens winters don’t mess around, and the older the house, the more there is to worry about. If your pipes froze last year they’re going to freeze again – cold doesn’t forget where it got in. That boiler that barely limped through March isn’t healing itself over the summer. And if you’ve never once tested your shutoff valve, that’s a gamble you’re taking every single day whether you realize it or not.

Call Queens Plumber at (929) 481-3200 or go see them at 53-05 108th St, Corona, NY 11368. Have them come through the house in the fall while there’s still time to fix things on your schedule instead of on an emergency basis. It’s a boring appointment. You won’t post about it on Instagram. But when the first hard freeze rolls in and your pipes hold and your heat kicks on like it’s supposed to, you’ll know why.

Your plumbing doesn’t care what month it is. Better to be ready than lucky.

<iframe src=”https://www.google.com/maps/embed?pb=!1m18!1m12!1m3!1d3022.887687307173!2d-73.85434599999999!3d40.7424968!2m3!1f0!2f0!3f0!3m2!1i1024!2i768!4f13.1!3m3!1m2!1s0xd904ba8a2785a09%3A0x627b1ba884191999!2sQueens%20Plumber!5e0!3m2!1sen!2sus!4v1778538294436!5m2!1sen!2sus” width=”600″ height=”450″ style=”border:0;” allowfullscreen=”” loading=”lazy” referrerpolicy=”no-referrer-when-downgrade”></iframe>

<!– Generated using https://microdatagenerator.org/localbusiness-microdata-generator/ –>

<div itemscope itemtype=”https://schema.org/LocalBusiness”>

    <div itemprop=”name”>Queens Plumber</div>

    <div>Phone: <span itemprop=”telephone”>(929) 481-3200</span></div>

    <div>Url: <span itemprop=”url”>http://queensnyplumber.com/</span></div>

    <div itemprop=”address” itemscope itemtype=”https://schema.org/PostalAddress”>

        <div itemprop=”streetAddress”>53-05 108th St</div>

        <div>

            <span itemprop=”addressLocality”>Corona</span>,

            <span itemprop=”addressRegion”>NY</span>

            <span itemprop=”postalCode”>11368</span>

        </div>

    </div>

</div>

Similar Posts