Not sure if I understand you but one of the reasons I put the yard hydrant down hill from the house and the shut off valve in line before the house was in case we left for an extended period of time during the winter we could drain water out of the house so it wouldn't freeze. We would obviously leave a heater on in the house but if the power went out there would be no heat to keep the water from freezing. Hope this answers any question of why we put a hydrant where we did. :)
I have multiple names for it depending on the day and how much I have to fix. lol. On a serious note, no I do not have a name for it. Never got into naming vehicles or equipment. My mom did though, she named everybody's car. lol :)
? Out side highdren has no back flow prevention so it can't back siphon back to house?
Not sure if I understand you but one of the reasons I put the yard hydrant down hill from the house and the shut off valve in line before the house was in case we left for an extended period of time during the winter we could drain water out of the house so it wouldn't freeze. We would obviously leave a heater on in the house but if the power went out there would be no heat to keep the water from freezing. Hope this answers any question of why we put a hydrant where we did. :)
your backhoe must be vintage by now but he (she?) does a good job digging ditches as well as multiple other tasks. Do you have a name for her?
I have multiple names for it depending on the day and how much I have to fix. lol. On a serious note, no I do not have a name for it. Never got into naming vehicles or equipment. My mom did though, she named everybody's car. lol :)
@@KoalityofLife love the multiple names !
good god grease it! all that clunk and chimmer-chang......
Hahaha. I do grease it, bushings are so worn out it doesn't make much difference. But this 1968 case backhoe still runs. :)