Thanks for the many responses.  I am inclined to keep the barrels indoors to 
avoid the risk of damaging them.  I think we can rearrange the one barrel that 
is in the way of the shelves.

Thanks again.

Wayne

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jimmy Podsim 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Thursday, October 30, 2008 9:54 AM
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] Hard Plastic Water Barrels


  In my experience working in a processing plant be for it closed. Plastic 
barrels don't take well to freezing and thawing. The plastic will get hard and 
crack.

  ... 73 ... KD5QHH ... Jimmy ...
  http://www.podsim.us
  MSN or windows live... [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Skype, jimmy.podsim ...blind people please note the period between the names.
  Have a great day!

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Wayne W Hinckley 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Thursday, October 30, 2008 1:04 AM
  Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Hard Plastic Water Barrels

  I have three hard plastic water barrels for an emergency supply of H2O 
sitting in the furnace room in the basement. It is long past time to exchange 
the contents for fresh water.

  My wife wishes they were not in the furnace room because at least one of them 
restricts access to shelving there. The only other places they could go are in 
the garage or the shed. We live in Utah near Salt Lake City and the water will 
freeze during the winter in any unheated location. In fact, our fall and spring 
seasons have many freezing night and warm days giving us a repeated freeze and 
thaw cycle for days at a time.

  Do any of you have experience with these barrels, and will freezing them make 
them break? If not a problem, how much head room should there be to allow the 
water to expand as it freezes?

  Thanks for any feedback.

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