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Home > Archive > Home Repair forum > March 2008 > Increasing shower water pressure
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| Author |
Increasing shower water pressure
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| rayhaun@hotmail.com 2008-03-31, 9:25 am |
| Hi,
I am planning on installing a portable shower and the overhead water
tank is just one foot above the shower head. I need to know how can I
increase the water pressure at the shower end without the use of any
pump.
Could this be acheived by increasing the shower line piping dia ?
Please see my diagram for referrance: http://rayhaun75.googlepages.com/SHOWER.jpg
Please advise...............shall be very grateful to you.
Regards
Rehan
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| Edwin Pawlowski 2008-03-31, 9:25 am |
|
<rayhaun@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:3393c01e-8a0e-4e9d-8fe0-da20689512a5@e39g2000hsf.googlegroups.com...
> Hi,
> I am planning on installing a portable shower and the overhead water
> tank is just one foot above the shower head. I need to know how can I
> increase the water pressure at the shower end without the use of any
> pump.
> Could this be acheived by increasing the shower line piping dia ?
> Please see my diagram for referrance:
> http://rayhaun75.googlepages.com/SHOWER.jpg
> Please advise...............shall be very grateful to you.
>
> Regards
> Rehan
The only way to increase pressure is to lower the shower head or raise the
tank considerably or add a pump. The pressure is what it is and increasing
line size does nothing to pressure, but increases flow. You can pressurize
the tank, but that is just an air pump instead of a water pump.
I forgot, you can increase the gravitational pull of the earth too.
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| rayhaun75@gmail.com 2008-03-31, 9:25 am |
| On Mar 31, 2:53 pm, "Edwin Pawlowski" <e...@snet.net> wrote:
> <rayh...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:3393c01e-8a0e-4e9d-8fe0-da20689512a5@e39g2000hsf.googlegroups.com...
>
>
>
> The only way to increase pressure is to lower the shower head or raise the
> tank considerably or add a pump. The pressure is what it is and increasing
> line size does nothing to pressure, but increases flow. You can pressurize
> the tank, but that is just an air pump instead of a water pump.
>
> I forgot, you can increase the gravitational pull of the earth too.
Thanks Edwin I really appreciate it, will do as advised.
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| rayhaun@hotmail.com 2008-03-31, 9:25 am |
| On Mar 31, 2:53 pm, "Edwin Pawlowski" <e...@snet.net> wrote:
> <rayh...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:3393c01e-8a0e-4e9d-8fe0-da20689512a5@e39g2000hsf.googlegroups.com...
>
>
>
> The only way to increase pressure is to lower the shower head or raise the
> tank considerably or add a pump. The pressure is what it is and increasing
> line size does nothing to pressure, but increases flow. You can pressurize
> the tank, but that is just an air pump instead of a water pump.
>
> I forgot, you can increase the gravitational pull of the earth too.
Thanks Edwin, I really appreciate it, will do as advised.
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| DerbyDad03 2008-03-31, 9:26 am |
| On Mar 31, 5:53=A0am, "Edwin Pawlowski" <e...@snet.net> wrote:
> <rayh...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:3393c01e-8a0e-4e9d-8fe0-da20689512a5@e39g2000hsf.googlegroups.com...
>
>
>
> The only way to increase pressure is to lower the shower head or raise the=
> tank considerably or add a pump. =A0The pressure is what it is and increas=
ing
> line size does nothing to pressure, but increases flow. =A0You can pressur=
ize
> the tank, but that is just an air pump instead of a water pump.
>
> I forgot, you can increase the gravitational pull of the earth too.
OT, but your mention of a portable shower reminds me of the coolest
shower I ever used.
A friend bought small cottage by a creek with a very small bathroom
and no shower. Water was supplied by a well and had decent pressure.
He added an outdoor shower next to the back door by building walls of
lattice and planting some type of clinging vine around the base. For
the first few years, privacy was provided by shower curtains inside
the stall, but once the vines covered the lattice the curtains were
removed. The user was hidden from view but still showering in the
great outdoors.
The shower was cozy, but there was still room for 2.
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| cshenk 2008-03-31, 1:25 pm |
| <rayhaun@hotmail.com> wrote
> Hi,
> I am planning on installing a portable shower and the overhead water
> tank is just one foot above the shower head. I need to know how can I
> increase the water pressure at the shower end without the use of any
> pump.
> Could this be acheived by increasing the shower line piping dia ?
> Please see my diagram for referrance:
> http://rayhaun75.googlepages.com/SHOWER.jpg
> Please advise...............shall be very grateful to you.
Hi Rehaun! Nice camp style there! It will work as you designed it well
enough but to increase the water pressure you'll have to built the tank
higher and will only get the best pressure when it's full.
Had a friend in my youth who's dad built a cabin and I'd go camping with
their family sometimes when in college. He built something a bit like this.
It was filled from a sluice bleed off from a small trickling waterfall that
fed a creek or you could just pull up a bucket from the creek (little river,
not but 4 feet wide) to fill the tank. When the tank was full, it fed the
excess back to the creek.
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