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Dual check valve

Short definition

A dual check valve is two independent spring-loaded checks in series in a compact assembly, typically without test cocks. Listed under ASSE 1024 and rated for low-hazard residential service. Used by some water utilities at the meter to provide baseline backflow protection (“containment”) of the public main against potential homeowner-side cross-connections. Different from a DCVA — no annual testing required.

What it is

The dual check has two spring-loaded check valves stacked in series in a small body. Each check is independent — failure of one doesn’t compromise the other. No shutoff valves, no test cocks. Compact enough to fit inside a meter pit or a tight under-sink space.

The key distinction from a DCVA (Double Check Valve Assembly, ASSE 1015):

  • Dual check (ASSE 1024) — no shutoffs, no test cocks. Used for “containment” — protecting the public main from the customer’s premises. No annual testing required.
  • DCVA (ASSE 1015) — has shutoffs and test cocks. Used for “isolation” — protecting one cross-connection within a property. Annual testing required.

Both have two checks in series. The difference is whether the device can be functionally tested in place.

Why it matters to a homeowner

Some WA water utilities install a dual check at the meter for every residential customer as standard infrastructure — a “containment” layer protecting the public main from any unidentified homeowner-side cross-connections. Other utilities don’t, and rely entirely on the customer’s premise-isolation devices (PVBs on irrigation, DCVAs on fire systems, etc.).

If you have a dual check at your meter, three practical implications:

  • No annual testing required by the customer; the utility considers it low-maintenance infrastructure.
  • Doesn’t replace the irrigation or fire-system backflow assemblies; those are separate and still required.
  • Generally low failure rate. Passive device with no external operator and only the spring-loaded checks as moving parts.

A plumber may also install a dual check at a residential service for an additional protection layer beyond the utility’s own infrastructure. The cost is small ($20–$60 part) and the install is straightforward at any in-line location.

Common variants and what it isn’t

  • Dual check (ASSE 1024) vs. DCVA (ASSE 1015). Both have two checks in series. DCVA has shutoffs and test cocks (annual testing); dual check does not.
  • Dual check vs. single check valve. Single has one disc; dual has two for redundancy.

Common failure modes

  • Mineral or debris at the check seats — slow reverse leak.
  • Spring fatigue over many years.
  • Generally low failure rate — passive device with no external operator.