Remember Me?
Menu
Home
Search
Today's Posts
Home
Search
Today's Posts
BoatBanter.com
»
rec.boats
»
General
>
plumbng issues
LinkBack
Thread Tools
Search this Thread
Display Modes
Prev
Next
#
11
posted to rec.boats
[email protected]
external usenet poster
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jul 2007
Posts: 36,387
plumbng issues
On Tue, 26 Jan 2021 00:57:34 -0500, Wayne B
wrote:
On Mon, 25 Jan 2021 23:32:21 -0500,
wrote:
On Mon, 25 Jan 2021 19:32:02 -0000 (UTC), Bill
wrote:
justan wrote:
Bill Wrote in message:r
Getting a new heater and AC system. When the guy was under house doing
theducts, he found two leaks in the water lines. Plumber could not get
therefor a week, so decided I had to crawl under and do the job.
Leaking pipeto a Union and a leaking sweated joint. Water still
dripping from lines,so near impossible to solder. Used Sharkbite
connectors. Fabulousinvention.
Sharkbite, PEX, and other relatively new plumbing materials are
good things to know about. I was thinking of using PVC to run air
compressor air lines around the perimeter of my garage until I
read some horror stories about that material and decided to use
PEX instead. I used a number of Sharkbite fittings but I had
trouble sealing one particular PEX to 1/2 NPT Sharkbite fitting.
in this case I used a Flair-it brand plastic fitting instead. It
screws together; no tools required.
I am doing copper lines.
PVC, CPVC and PEX are king here these days. Florida water seems to be
tough on copper. I really think it is electrical tho. Mine is not
connected to the street and single point connected to the grid. I
haven't had a problem. Places with city water get slammed worse than
well customers. Older homes with metal from the street seem OK too.
I think it is electrolysis.
Law suits were flying in Cape Coral a decade or two ago and nobody
really ever had an answer they were willing to admit.
Most re plumbs were done in plastic.
===
We had to get our place replumbed in plastic a few years back after
developing a series of pin hole leaks in the original copper. The
theory is that the Cape's RO water lacks minerals (TDS) so that over
time it tries to leach out impurities in the copper.
https://4perfec****er.com/blog/reverse-osmosis-and-copper-pipes/
That was certainly one of the theories. I am not sure anyone had a
definitive answer since older homes with copper pipe were OK.
It was the electrical guys (IAEI) who theorized the electrolysis.
Reply With Quote
Thread Tools
Search this Thread
Show Printable Version
Search this Thread
:
Advanced Search
Display Modes
Switch to Linear Mode
Switch to Hybrid Mode
Threaded Mode
Posting Rules
Smilies
are
On
[IMG]
code is
Off
HTML code is
Off
Trackbacks
are
On
Pingbacks
are
On
Refbacks
are
On
Similar Threads
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
tow vehicle issues
Don White
General
2
January 4th 09
12:23 AM
Health issues
Gordon
Cruising
1
April 12th 08
09:30 PM
Prop issues
JoeSpareBedroom
General
4
October 18th 06
06:19 PM
Crew issues
[email protected]
Cruising
10
May 17th 05
03:56 AM
car top hull issues
zak
Touring
4
August 8th 03
12:09 AM
All times are GMT +1. The time now is
05:04 AM
.
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 BoatBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.
Contact Us
BoatBanter Home
Privacy Statement
Copyright © 2017
LinkBack
LinkBack URL
About LinkBacks