Paul-
How does every other country in the developed world manage to deliver water during peak times? As an American who lived in England for 12 years andn Germany for three years, I was always amaze at the antiquated, outdated, an inconvenient system of the English domestic water tank. Taking a shower was like standing in the rain-no water pressure at all, unless, of course, you went to the added expense of installing a cumbersome electric hot water tank in your shower. And I loved occasionally going up in the attic and opening up the water tank and finding a dead bird in it. I always concluded that this absurd system dated from the days when the infrastructure in England was someone uncertain and unreliable to make sure the house had water during frequent water mains outages which probably occurred. It is, after all, England, where s-o-o many things seem to never work very well. But since frequent water outages are surely a thing in the far distant past, I conclude that the only remaining reason is: because it is England, charmingly eccentric England, where so many things just make no sense. EG: gas pumps with no automatic shut off which means you have to hold the handle the entire time the tank fills. E.g.: train switches which freeze when the weather goes below 32° [ they don’t in Chicago, Moscow, Helsinki, Zürich). E.G. Train service which is severely interrupted by leaves on the track in the fall. EG crossed lines when making a landline phone call, IF the call goes through at all. I could go on and on.