jgohlke
My other hobby
The details:
Florida house built in 1972, concrete slab, no basement. All copper, with an electrical ground to the cold water pipe buried under the house. With the water quality and lightning combination in central Florida, the copper pipe just doesn't last much past the 30 year mark. We re-plumbed our last house at the 35 year mark. Our current house is a 3-bath house, attic is accessible (it's August!). We don't have to be very concerned about freezing.
Last night we discovered an under-the-slab leak in one of the back bathrooms. This is the 2nd under-the-slab leak for this house and based on the last repair ($1400 in 1993), I'm thinking "OUCH!" on this one. About a month ago we had a pinhole leak in the copper by the water heater in the garage which I fixed myself. I'm comfortable sweating together copper pipe (I just bought an trigger-fired MAPP gas torch!)
I replumbed the old house with PB (that gray flexible stuff you crimp together - it had all the lawsuits). The lawsuits were really about poor installation and mostly came down to a poorly adjusted crimp tool. I rented mine from a local plumbing store, it worked well, was easy to use and we didn't have any problems.
I spent a few minutes on Google this morning and it looks like the list of replacement pipe includes; PVC (cold), CPVC (hot), PEX (both) and of course copper.
I've put in lawn sprinkler systems, so working with ©PVC isn't a problem. I liked the flexibility of the PB and PEX is attractive for that same reason, but availability may be a problem (supplies, tools).
For now, we are living with the water shut off except when we use it. We have 2 shutoff valves for the house, one up by the house, buried in the flower garden and the other out by the street (water meter). I have a meter "key" so we are just walking out to the street and back when we need water (I have some 5-gal buckets by the toilets we are filling from the pool)...
Appreciate any help or advice you can give.
Cheers,
Joe
Florida house built in 1972, concrete slab, no basement. All copper, with an electrical ground to the cold water pipe buried under the house. With the water quality and lightning combination in central Florida, the copper pipe just doesn't last much past the 30 year mark. We re-plumbed our last house at the 35 year mark. Our current house is a 3-bath house, attic is accessible (it's August!). We don't have to be very concerned about freezing.
Last night we discovered an under-the-slab leak in one of the back bathrooms. This is the 2nd under-the-slab leak for this house and based on the last repair ($1400 in 1993), I'm thinking "OUCH!" on this one. About a month ago we had a pinhole leak in the copper by the water heater in the garage which I fixed myself. I'm comfortable sweating together copper pipe (I just bought an trigger-fired MAPP gas torch!)
I replumbed the old house with PB (that gray flexible stuff you crimp together - it had all the lawsuits). The lawsuits were really about poor installation and mostly came down to a poorly adjusted crimp tool. I rented mine from a local plumbing store, it worked well, was easy to use and we didn't have any problems.
I spent a few minutes on Google this morning and it looks like the list of replacement pipe includes; PVC (cold), CPVC (hot), PEX (both) and of course copper.
I've put in lawn sprinkler systems, so working with ©PVC isn't a problem. I liked the flexibility of the PB and PEX is attractive for that same reason, but availability may be a problem (supplies, tools).
For now, we are living with the water shut off except when we use it. We have 2 shutoff valves for the house, one up by the house, buried in the flower garden and the other out by the street (water meter). I have a meter "key" so we are just walking out to the street and back when we need water (I have some 5-gal buckets by the toilets we are filling from the pool)...
Appreciate any help or advice you can give.
Cheers,
Joe