Why bag the hydrant?
Saw this going to a friend’s house- they bagged the fire hydrants….one thought was snow; but this is the first year apparently. And snow has been a mild issue this year compared to most.
Saw this going to a friend’s house- they bagged the fire hydrants….one thought was snow; but this is the first year apparently. And snow has been a mild issue this year compared to most.
Apparently, it is too keep salt off of them.
https://www.cbsnews.com/minnesota/news/why-are-fire-hydrant-covered-in-red-plastic/
Cheaper to do bags than re-paint off-schedule. Usually cities have a schedule for maintenance, and the bag, in this case, is preventative for rust without being off-schedule for painting.
That seems like chump change for something that probably already costs over $1000, won't take a gallon of paint, and is meant to last for decades.
You don't remove them you strip clean and paint in place.
Lol down votes I've painted hydrants. You have obviously never. There would be no reason to remove them. Since you would also be disabling the hydrant to do it and what do you do if there is a fire? Here you dumb bastards.
I imagine a fire hydrant is pretty expensive as well. Can't imagine covering it in salt resistant paint would be that much of a price increase and even if it is I don't imagine it would be cost prohibitive if it means a 20 year replacement cycle vs. a 10 year cycle.
If anything this may be protecting them from dog piss.
Well ya, that's why you put it on when the thing is being installed. Not talking about a Reno/repair.
If they didn't put salt resistant paint on it when they first installed the thing because it was a few hundred dollars more that would be stupid.
Paint gets scratches, especially where things turn and rub against each other. You don't want the turning bits becoming seized and finding out at the worst time
Apparently, the same gets in and corrosion starts. The second article mentions a city that stopped doing it.
I was driving down a highway once and noticed that there was a blue reflective marker on top of the concrete barrier every few hundred feet or so.
Took me about an hour or two before I noticed that it aligned with where the drainage basins were, probably for snow removal in the winter.
I believe there's some logic in alternating patterns being more attention-grabbing to our brains, which is why you usually see stripes on anything you need to be cautious around.
The pole isn't for locating the hydrant, per se, as much as it is for avoiding the hydrant. It's so you don't drive into it if it's covered in snow.
it's also for locating the hydrant when it's covered in snow. Historically we'd have 3-4 feet of snow and most places are more than somewhat lax about clearing out the hydrant.
Because its easier to see
It's also why flashing led road signs exist here in Australia around school zones
Possibly out of service. There are dedicated high visibility bags for this purpose but if whoever did this didn’t have one, this looks like a stopgap to help make it more obvious.
Firefighter here:
They're made from cast iron that likes to rust and the only thing protecting them is the Paint on them.
My guess is that the paint got scratched and they're bagging it up until they can repaint it.
I've never heard of this, & I'm Canadian.
I imagine out east, in the Maritimes, they'd have to put marker-poles on the things, because they sometimes get 5' of snow in a single onslaught, but ..
.. it simply isn't something I'd ever heard-of.
Our fire-departments deal with the snow & ice every ( normal, not now ) winter.
shrug
Isn't the street that concrete area from where the picture was taken? So if a snow plough comes to remove the snow, it essentially would burry the hydrant.
Related question. Why are north American hydrants all of the "stick up out of the ground as a permanent fixture" type, rather than the more discreet and less likely to be damaged "pipe fitting concealed beneath a removable plate" type?
Probably because it’s still liable to be damaged (especially by freeze/thaw cycles,), the plate is liable to be lost, it’s harder to find- especially under a foot of snow-
And my personal favorite: tradition.
if that were a problem, honestly, hydrants wouldn't have lasted a freeze/thaw cycle. Water expands and breaks shit (potholes for example,) it might get frozen and harder to open, but they have massively huge hydrant wrenches for a reason. (and it ain't compensating for their tiny hose...) (that's what the big hose is for.)