All Forum Posts by: Corey G.
Corey G. has started 28 posts and replied 99 times.
Post: Remotely monitor water meters for leaks

- Investor
- Phoenix, AZ
- Posts 105
- Votes 26
James, finding the water leak isn't the issue, catching it early is the issue. Last time I had a toilet leak, it cost me at least 200 dollars. Which in the long scheme of things isn't a whole lot but if I could install a device for say 200 dollars, that would notify me of a leak when its happening, I would never have a big water bill again. I'm all about reducing expenses and water leaks are unnecessary expenses that I don't get informed about for a month. I'm just asking for early detection. Not having to wait a whole month to find out my water is leaking. I don't think that is unreasonable.
Post: Remotely monitor water meters for leaks

- Investor
- Phoenix, AZ
- Posts 105
- Votes 26
I've been searching for quite a while today and the only thing that looks promising is called water hero and its a kickstarter campaign that was funded but the product is still under development. A couple of people created what they needed using a water meter with a pulse output and some small circuitry that somehow connects online. Seems very technical and complicated. A wifi camera could work I suppose. I'd just have to remember to check it everyday and somehow ensure that the dirt doesn't block the camera from reading the meter.
Post: Remotely monitor water meters for leaks

- Investor
- Phoenix, AZ
- Posts 105
- Votes 26
I did see that but I was hoping for a device (perhaps a secondary water meter) that would send me the water usage through wifi or something. More like a one time installation as opposed to a company monitoring service. I don't know what it costs but it can't be cheap and would likely defeat the purpose. I'd rather stay away from sub-metering the units as some of my properties have 4 tenants and 1 laundry. I have found a lot of articles on smart water meters being installed by some city water companies but not much on wifi enabled water meters for consumer purchase.
Post: Remotely monitor water meters for leaks

- Investor
- Phoenix, AZ
- Posts 105
- Votes 26
Sorry, I reread my original post and I might have worded things incorrectly. Essentially I just want to remotely monitor the main water meter to detect when I have a leak in the building (so that I can fix it right away) and not have to find out on my bill at the end of the month. I hope that clears up any confusion.
Post: Remotely monitor water meters for leaks

- Investor
- Phoenix, AZ
- Posts 105
- Votes 26
Typically the leaks have been toilets which will constantly run and use water slowly. By the time I find out about it however, it usually is a big expense for such an easy fix. I did have an underground pipe burst once, as well as a leaking shut off valve another time, but that doesn't seem to be typical. I would just like to catch the leaks early so that if my tenant fails to notify me or doesn't notice, I don't have to find out on my water bill at the end of the month. 30 days of a constantly running toilet adds up. Not knowing how much water each tenant uses leaves me with a problem of how much to charge the tenant for the leak as well. Now once the leak is fixed, I would like to monitor for a few days to ensure the problem has been resolved and not have to find out on my next water bill 30 days later that the leak is ongoing. I figure a one time expense to prevent major water bills in the future might be in my best interest as long as it doesn't cost too much.
Post: Remotely monitor water meters for leaks

- Investor
- Phoenix, AZ
- Posts 105
- Votes 26
Hello everyone. I've been reading on biggerpockets for a while but have rarely posted anything before. Thought I would finally ask for some advice. If you can help, I would appreciate it.
First off, I have some multiplexes I own in different areas of the city and none of them have been metered separately for water so I pay it and just charge a little more for rent. This works well until there is a leak at the property and then I have a huge water bill. I'm trying to get my tenants to be a little more observant and have considered charging them if they don't catch leaks soon enough. The problem is the water usage is for 4 units and determining how much to charge a tenant for an overage is tricky. What if there were multiple leaks? So ideally, I would like to catch the leaks before they become a problem. It looks like there are water meters I could install after the city meter which do pulse output but I don't know how that works or if it will do remote monitoring. I'm pretty sure the city uses RF signals to read the meters. Is there a device I can buy that would read the meters once or twice a day and have that sent to me so I can monitor it. Has anyone found a good solution to remotely monitor water consumption?
Post: Best suggestions for replacing several AC units (rooftop package heat pumps)

- Investor
- Phoenix, AZ
- Posts 105
- Votes 26
I've heard about online orders and the companies not honoring the warranty or having to sent parts back in for replacement? How accurate is that? I don't want to have a tenant out of AC for weeks waiting for the parts to ship. Also would you guys ever consider rehabbed units. There is a company here that gives a 1 year warranty on units and sells them for about 1800 to 2000
Post: Best suggestions for replacing several AC units (rooftop package heat pumps)

- Investor
- Phoenix, AZ
- Posts 105
- Votes 26
@Andrew, not sure if you misunderstood but I was wondering what to do about replacing several AC units at a time. I'm not super concerned with keeping cooling costs/electricity down.
Post: Best suggestions for replacing several AC units (rooftop package heat pumps)

- Investor
- Phoenix, AZ
- Posts 105
- Votes 26
Hello Everyone,
New to bigger pockets but not to investing in properties. I own 3 multiplex properties and Over the last few years I've spent a lot of money on AC units that have died. I have working (but old) AC units and the ones I haven't replaced are going to crap out on me soon I'm thinking. I'm looking for a better solution to replace the other units I have that won't cost me a fortune. I've spent between 2700 and 3200 for rooftop package heat pump replacements (which isn't terrible here in Phoenix) but 8 more of those is another 25,000 that I don't want to spend. So my question is what does everyone else do when replacing AC? I'm sure someone has figured out a better solution to this that I'm not aware of. Do you buy used units? Refurbished? Online wholesalers? Any advice is appreciated.