These flight sim games are played by a diversity of people, so I’m confident we have an American plumber in our midst who can answer my query
This Christmas I went to visit an English friend of mine, Mark, who lives in Scottsdale,AZ. We always joke about the state of English plumbing – the pseudo mixer taps with parallel hot and cold streams of water; the way the shower goes from warm to scalding if someone flushes the bog – that kind of thing.
Mark’s house is on three levels. The first floor just has the garage, which contains the hot water tank and the washer and dryer. The second floor has the third bedroom, a bathroom with shower, dining area, kitchen area and living room area. The third floor has the two main bedrooms which both have en suite bathrooms.
One time, Mark was using his shower just as I was about to use mine. Being British, I paused for a moment, wondering whether the plumbing would be able to cope with the demand of two showers on the third floor being run simultaneously. Then I remembered I was in America, which has superior plumbing, and went ahead. There was no problem at all! Both showers deliver water at a good pressure and an adequate and consistent temperature.
In Britain, had Mark suddenly turned on a hot tap (faucet), my shower may have run cold! By law, we are stuck with a system by which a cold water tank is stored in the roof somewhere, and provides water at instant demand, and refills at its leisure. The problem is that the hot water pressure in British homes always seems to suffer.
In Mark’s garage, I noticed a pipe with what looked like an electric pump mounted inline. Does the American plumbing system allow for water to be force fed to where its needed, instead of our own gravity based system?