Job Recruitment Website - Property management - Why does the property turn off the water valve?

Why does the property turn off the water valve?

Because the property management company wants to create profits/reduce losses.

Pipe blockage: the hot water circulation is slow due to the blockage of the filter screen or excessive sediment in the floor heating pipe. The hot water was cold before it reached the backwater end, and the floor heating pipe burned out. You can flush the floor heating pipe first. If the backwater end of the pipeline is not hot, or the hot water circulating flow (shown on the heat meter) still can't get up, you can find a property to change the filtering Internet cafe. If there is too much gas in the pipeline. Let more air out. If the backwater end is also very hot, and the indoor temperature can't go up (the temperature will not rise quickly after treatment, and the indoor air will heat up after the floor heating pipe heats the ground), it is necessary to check whether the doors and windows are not airtight enough to take away the indoor heat. Supplement: booster pump can be added. At present, it is estimated that there is little collective heating in our community. As far as I know, in some areas, before heating was changed to municipal heating, the heating fee was charged by the property, and the municipal heating company and the property were settled according to the calorific value. In this mode, residents pay fees according to government pricing, the property to be charged is fixed, and the actual settlement amount with the municipal heating company is uncertain (income is fixed and expenditure fluctuates). In order to create profits/reduce losses, property companies are bound to limit the temperature of residents and turn down the valves. Adding a set of valves can effectively increase the indoor temperature. Regarding the cost of municipal heating, I don't know if the property will lose money without controlling the valve, but it will definitely not lose money after controlling the valve. If it loses money, the property management company will jump. )