Water Conserving Plumbing on the Rise
Water conserving plumbing on the rise as American households seek ways to cut down water bills
According to recent report by the UN, 400 million people are currently facing severe worldwide water shortages. Despite a water-stressed future, American households waste gallons of water through long showers, dripping faucets, unnecessary flushing and silent toilet leaks. Nationwide plumbers work hard to raise residential water conservation awareness to cut down inflated water bills and save on much needed water.
Water conserving plumbing is on the rise with early leak detection and repair that go along way at saving gallons of water and thousands of dollars in water related damage. Toilets can leak out gallons of water without us noticing the problem at all. For this reason, toilets are also called the silent leakers. Inflated water bills can sometimes act as our only clue to running toilets.
A leaky toilet can be detected easily with a simple food dye test recommended by many professional plumbers. Add several drops of food dye into the tank of the toilet. If color appears in the bowl within half an hour, your toilet is indeed leaking water. Once you have detected the leaky source, summon professional repair to stop water wastage fast. Apart from repairing plumbing leaks fast, plumbers advise people to take short showers instead of baths, tighten dripping faucets, and close water flow when brushing teeth, soaping hands or dish washing.




