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DO NOT GO IN EXCESS OF 75 PSI under ANY CIRCUMSTANCES the acceptablle limit is actually 79 psi ( 550 kpa ) but you should stay well away from this, it is a common mosconception that pressure is what you seek when dealing with fixtures. I remedy this with this example.
lets pretend you have 2 showers, one is 1 psi and 50 gpm (gallons per minute flow ) the other is 50 psi and 1 gpm ... which shower do you prefer to use..
Thanks for this information. So, with the example, i would rather have the first one, 50 gpm (if i understand the terms right). But how do i get or adjust that?
Like, i used have waterpik shower massage for years, and then they stopped making them because of the water restriction laws (i think). they made a compliant version but it was nowhere near what it was before.
At my house, until the recent repair, my shower was just right, but borderline--is this called flow rate? Anyway, whatever it's called, i was calling it pressure, but whatever it's called, it was just right.
since the plumber replaced the leaking relief valve, the shower is not satisfactory.
I have been using a showerhead that increases gpm (i think). It was sold on ebay for a long time, but not any more. That shower head has made the shower work properly, as far as rinsing off soap, getting the hair wet down to the scalp, and feeling good. It is not a really strong shower which is what i had in my apartment, that water came out very forceful in all fixtures. When i moved to my house, i found that the shower was not nearly as strong but i put the special shower head on it, and that increased it just enough.
Now, even with the modified shower head, it's too weak to get my hair wet, it's difficult to get soap off, it doesn't easily reach all over, it's a poor experience, it takes longer, which probably means it uses more water, and i just want it to be fixed back like it was.
I appreciate any information that can help me with this. The plumber is coming today and i don't want to pay him hundreds of dollars and still have the shower be like it is now, and that worries me. I had the whole house repiped believing that the pressure or flow rates would be better but really saw no change. that was a lot more than a few hundred, so i wish i knew ways of giving things the best chance to work out right.
I wish i could fix this myself--it's not a good feeling when right after a repair, i have a worse problem. But i take your words to heart and don't want to create more problems by doing something wrong. If i adjust the pressure myself, i will be very careful.
thanks very much, i was watching some you tube videos where they showed how to adjust the pressure, but as you say, doing it too much is risky at best so before i would do something like that, i would want to have a lot of info and opinions.
When the plumber comes, can he test the shower and measure the flow rate, and then after the repair, measure it again and make sure it's substantially more? what tool or gauge measures flow rate from a fixture?