I know there are about 5,000 threads just on this forum talking about detecting a water leak. All of these seem to be looking at the symptom (water on the ground) rather than the source (pipe flowing water). I was curious if anyone has any exposure to any type of flow detection equipment? I know there are a couple types of these already available, so I'm wondering how easily it would be to use either in my implementation.
What I want to do:
I have a pigeon loft with an auto waterer hooked up to a hose bib on my shop. The hose is outside and always turned on. I have had issues with water freezing (not a surprise) and have been addressing each of these as they come up. I currently have shark-bite fittings inside the shop with a 25W light bulb inside the cabinet to add a bit of heat to keep the inside pipes from freezing. I have a hose bib insulative cover that keeps radiation and most of the convection off the hose bib itself. I now have heater tape run with the hose so that shouldn't freeze anymore. But, there's always a chance that something in the waterer could fail or the hose could age and rupture or
I want to add a sensor of some kind to the line so that if the flow is above xx gpm or the pressure drops by xx psi, I can have my system text me so I know I'm paying to water the field.
I know there are systems for washing machines that shut off if there's a leak, but I think these use a water detector and would require that I know where the leak happens (and keep rain off of it). I've also heard that there's some kind of device for ice makers for your fridge that's probably more appropriate. Ice makers are a low flow device, so if the hose breaks and there's a lot of flow, it does it's thing (shuts off I think). Beyond that, I'm not sure what to do.
Any thoughts? Seems like an interesting issue that someone might want to take a swing at.