Anonymous wrote:Can you get USAA? I have a house in Arlington that was coincidentally also built in 1947 with galvanized pipes and they covered it no problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've owned two houses both of which had galvanized pipes and was never asked about them by our insurer.
Having said that they are a legitimate risk - we just spend a bunch of money removing the last of the pipes in our house because there was a lot of water condensation building up on them and 2 years ago we had a burst pipe that we luckily discovered immediately and were able to shut the water down before we ended up with any damage but the plumber who did that patch told us we should have all of the old pipes replaced immediately.
But our pipes were 100 years old so you could be decades away from needing to replace - but you would not be able to see any signs of corrosion - I believe dropping water pressure is the best indicator you've got a pending problem which was what prompted us to lay out the money to swap out the pipes.
Learn to use periods.
Anonymous wrote:I've owned two houses both of which had galvanized pipes and was never asked about them by our insurer.
Having said that they are a legitimate risk - we just spend a bunch of money removing the last of the pipes in our house because there was a lot of water condensation building up on them and 2 years ago we had a burst pipe that we luckily discovered immediately and were able to shut the water down before we ended up with any damage but the plumber who did that patch told us we should have all of the old pipes replaced immediately.
But our pipes were 100 years old so you could be decades away from needing to replace - but you would not be able to see any signs of corrosion - I believe dropping water pressure is the best indicator you've got a pending problem which was what prompted us to lay out the money to swap out the pipes.