| I assume that you have actually been shocked by the faucet. You have been 'bit'. That is why you had an electician look at it... I believe some faucets have been made, with some various battery operated thing-a-ma-jigs... BUT this is NOT what is causing your problem.... What type of Hot Water heater do you have?? Electric?? As Azlighting has suggested - when it is daytime - go on down and shut off the MAIN breaker to your residence. Takes but a moment. Now - ALL power is killed to your home. (If it is not - you have another problem which DOES need to be addressed...) With MAIN shut off - go check your faucet. Do you read any voltage at it? Have any 'tingle' when you touch it?? If you do, you have another problem... If you don't know what your MAIN is - just shut off every blessed circuit breaker in your house... That way - you will shut off the MAIN. The MAIN is the one which says, 100; or 125; or 200 - or some such... With MAIN off - you should not have any electical tingle or voltage at faucet. Now, turn off all other circuits. Turn Main back on... Then, one by one, turn each of the other circuits back on - till the faucet again displays volatage, or you get that 'tingle' when touching... You have now identified the circuit which has a problem. An electrician should be able to diagnose and FIX this... As previous mentioned, it is possible (unlikely - but possible) for an electric hot water heater to be having some sort of bad difficulty - and electrically charging the water... (And the way the plumbing runs to this faucet - allows you to get zapped, when you don't notice it with others.) If that's the case - than said unit should be replaced. And you have copper or galvanized steel for plumbing I take it?? So, hopefully your water pipe is properly grounded?? If you have older wiring, and the piping is grounded, the piping could be providing a return path because of some broken wire... Hope this helps. It DOES need to be fixed! |