My Water Line Burst

Topics that do not fit anywhere else. Absolutely NO discussions of religion, race, or immigration!

Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton

User avatar

Oldgringo
Senior Member
Posts in topic: 1
Posts: 11203
Joined: Sat Mar 08, 2008 10:15 pm
Location: Pineywoods of east Texas

Re: My Water Line Burst

#16

Post by Oldgringo »

Did the pipe burst between the meter and the street or between the meter and the house? If it's between the meter and the street the billing agency/city owns it.

WTR
Banned
Posts in topic: 2
Posts: 1931
Joined: Mon Nov 16, 2015 10:41 pm

Re: My Water Line Burst

#17

Post by WTR »

:iagree:
AndyC wrote:Sweating copper piping: https://www.familyhandyman.com/plumbing ... /view-all/

I learned how to do this when helping a friend build a hunting camp; not hard. Flux is the magic ingredient - don't ignore it.
Make sure you clean the copper shiny new, use plenty of flux and purge all the water so it does not act as a heat sink.

TreyHouston
Senior Member
Posts in topic: 3
Posts: 1904
Joined: Fri Feb 19, 2016 5:00 pm
Location: Tomball

Re: My Water Line Burst

#18

Post by TreyHouston »

puma guy wrote:
AndyC wrote:Sweating copper piping: https://www.familyhandyman.com/plumbing ... /view-all/

I learned how to do this when helping a friend build a hunting camp; not hard. Flux is the magic ingredient - don't ignore it.
:thumbs2:
WOW! I will try to tackle this next time! Seams easy!
"Jump in there sport, get it done and we'll all sing your praises." -Chas

How many times a day could you say this? :cheers2:
User avatar

Syntyr
Senior Member
Posts in topic: 1
Posts: 1662
Joined: Wed Jul 29, 2009 3:54 pm
Location: Houston

Re: My Water Line Burst

#19

Post by Syntyr »

AndyC wrote:Sweating copper piping: https://www.familyhandyman.com/plumbing ... /view-all/

I learned how to do this when helping a friend build a hunting camp; not hard. Flux is the magic ingredient - don't ignore it.
:iagree:
What AndyC said. Its not hard. About 20 bucks worth of supplies:
Torch
Solder
Flux
Sandpaper
Copper pipe
Pipe cutter
Two slip fittings one for each end.

Dig (this is the hard part). Give yourself plenty of room to work. Cut out damaged section plus an inch or two. Clean up the ends as shiny and bright as you can. Cut new section to fit but give yourself enough play on each side to put the couplers and new pipe toghter and sweat the 4 joints together. Look sweating copper joints on youtube for how to. Buy a couple of extra couplers and practice. It takes a time or two but you can do it.
Syntyr
"Wherever you go... There you are." - Buckaroo Banzai
"Inconceivable!" - Fizzinni
User avatar

troglodyte
Senior Member
Posts in topic: 3
Posts: 1317
Joined: Fri Dec 24, 2004 4:16 pm
Location: Hockley County
Contact:

Re: My Water Line Burst

#20

Post by troglodyte »

One of the hardest parts no matter what kind of pipe is getting the new piece back in with the couplers. Pex is easy enough because it is flexible and a slipfix will work with pvc. Slipfixes weren’t around when I was installing sprinkler systems so I figured out a better and easier way. Works on pvc and copper the easiest and galvanized with the right compression couplers and ells.

Cut out the broken piece. Cut enough so everything will fit back. Put an ell in the ends of the existing pipe and point them in the same direction on the same plane. Cut a piece of new pipe so it fits just between the ells you just installed. Put an elll on each end of your splice. Make sure they face the same direction and are on the same plane. Now cut a couple of short pieces a couple of inches long. Glue or solder them into the ells on the Existing pipe. Now glue or solder the splice on to the nubs. You will make a “u” of sorts. Saves you from having to figure out how to bend or arch the pipe to fit.

I hope that makes sense. It’s harder to describe than it is to.
Talon Firearms Training
Instructor - License To Carry, School Safety, First Responder: Texas DPS, Certified Instructor: Rangemasters/Tom Givens
NRA Instructor - Basic Pistol, Personal Protection in the Home, Personal Protection Outside the Home, Range Safety Officer
Stop The Bleed Instructor

MaduroBU
Senior Member
Posts in topic: 1
Posts: 702
Joined: Sat Nov 12, 2016 9:11 am

Re: My Water Line Burst

#21

Post by MaduroBU »

If you solder it, remember a few things.

1.) Get a bigger torch than you think you'll need. A TS8000 with MAPP gas Heats the pipe faster and makes it easier to heat everything evenly.

2) the pipe cannot be too clean. You need to use emery cloth and/or a wire brush until the pipe surface is as shiny as copper that you just cut. Grind a piece of waste pipe with a dremel tool grinding wheel. THAT'S how shiny you need the pipe to be before you flux it.

3.) Flux anywhere that you want solder to stick. Solder won't stick to pipe that isn't clean and fluxed. Solder won't stay around forever, and will burn away if you're heating the pipe for a full minute trying to get it all hot at once. See point 1.

4.) Use lead free plumbing solder.

swilkes
Member
Posts in topic: 6
Posts: 58
Joined: Sat Jun 03, 2017 7:13 pm
Location: wichita fallls

Re: My Water Line Burst

#22

Post by swilkes »

MaduroBU wrote:If you solder it, remember a few things.

1.) Get a bigger torch than you think you'll need. A TS8000 with MAPP gas Heats the pipe faster and makes it easier to heat everything evenly.

2) the pipe cannot be too clean. You need to use emery cloth and/or a wire brush until the pipe surface is as shiny as copper that you just cut. Grind a piece of waste pipe with a dremel tool grinding wheel. THAT'S how shiny you need the pipe to be before you flux it.

3.) Flux anywhere that you want solder to stick. Solder won't stick to pipe that isn't clean and fluxed. Solder won't stay around forever, and will burn away if you're heating the pipe for a full minute trying to get it all hot at once. See point 1.

4.) Use lead free plumbing solder.
when soft soldering to much heat is a bad thing. It will acutallly push the solder out. All new rolls of solder since the 80’s I think is lead free

2farnorth
Senior Member
Posts in topic: 3
Posts: 795
Joined: Wed Feb 09, 2011 5:35 pm
Location: White Hall, Ar

Re: My Water Line Burst

#23

Post by 2farnorth »

I believe that sweated or threaded fittings are the only things permitted on gas line. Using a shark bite on gas is plain irresponsible and a danger.
Shark bites are dependable if proper pipe prep is done. Squared, clean, and debured cuts are needed.
Shark bite should not be used on the old Quest pipe (gray or white) used in mobile and prefabs in 90s and early 2000s (too soft)
When used on iron pipe underground rust will eventually deteriorate the connection. Above ground should be ok unless rust or other corrosion is already present,
Regular PVC requires special more expensive Shark bites,
CPVC (yellow or tan), copper and pex use the standard Shark bites.
Too the OP: Determine what type of pipe and how long the break is before making any decisions. If white pvc there are more options available. An old glued coupler may have pulled apart. We don't have very many copper pipe meter to house situations in our area. 90% are pvc or iron.
N5PNZ

NotRPB
Senior Member
Posts in topic: 4
Posts: 1356
Joined: Tue May 05, 2015 8:24 am

Re: My Water Line Burst

#24

Post by NotRPB »

Sharkbite is a brand name like probite http://www.probite.com/

you do not want a plain "coupling"
http://www.globalindustrial.com/p/plumb ... nect-34-in

but a specific repair fitting which is a bit longer allowing more "slip"

SharkBite U3016LF Slip Coupling, Push To Connect, 3/4 In
http://www.midlandhardware.com/212940.h ... gJOxfD_BwE

I have a few, but you can get them at Home Depot/Lowes/True Value/Ace easier than driving to where I live

NotRPB
Senior Member
Posts in topic: 4
Posts: 1356
Joined: Tue May 05, 2015 8:24 am

Re: My Water Line Burst

#25

Post by NotRPB »

MaduroBU wrote:If you solder it, remember a few things.

1.) Get a bigger torch than you think you'll need. A TS8000 with MAPP gas Heats the pipe faster and makes it easier to heat everything evenly.

2) the pipe cannot be too clean. You need to use emery cloth and/or a wire brush until the pipe surface is as shiny as copper that you just cut. Grind a piece of waste pipe with a dremel tool grinding wheel. THAT'S how shiny you need the pipe to be before you flux it.

3.) Flux anywhere that you want solder to stick. Solder won't stick to pipe that isn't clean and fluxed. Solder won't stay around forever, and will burn away if you're heating the pipe for a full minute trying to get it all hot at once. See point 1.

4.) Use lead free plumbing solder.
:iagree:
MAPP gas (comes in the yellow instead of blue can) Heats the pipe faster

tip: (not withstanding gravity,) solder flows towards the heat source so you'd heat the middle of a fitting instead of the edge of one.

having soldered repairs and using the sharkbite slip fix .... do the slip fix (not copler) because you'll need to slip it onto a section, then slip it bacvk off part way to put the other section back in (that's why the longer repair probite/sharkbite slip coupling instead of tyhe normal short coupling ... and that maneuver is tougher to do with soldering)

If you decide to solder you may need four 90 degree Ells and short sections of pipee between them (or 4 street ells) and in order to get both ends back into couplers on the ends because the existing pipe doesn't shrink or stretch a lot ...

This shows the repair slip fitting ( as well as a valve, but you can use 2 slip repair fittings or a coupler and a slip repair fitting with a short piece of copper or PEX) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEsqtSA7HsM

Topic author
imkopaka
Senior Member
Posts in topic: 9
Posts: 518
Joined: Wed Jan 20, 2016 1:30 pm
Location: Lamesa, TX

Re: My Water Line Burst

#26

Post by imkopaka »

Thanks for the responses, everyone. I'm going down to city hall to make doubly sure there aren't any code restrictions that would net me a misdemeanor for trying to fix a pipe. Then I'll start digging. Once I reach the pipe I'll head to the only two hardware stores in town and see what they have. If they have the sharkbites and PEX, I'll use that, if not I'll replace with copper. I may use that U-shape trick, troglodyte. Thanks for the advice, guys - I'll let you know how it goes. :tiphat:
Never bring a knife to a gun fight.
Carry gun: Springfield XD Tactical .45
User avatar

SQLGeek
Senior Member
Posts in topic: 1
Posts: 3269
Joined: Sun Feb 28, 2010 1:48 am
Location: Richmond, TX

Re: My Water Line Burst

#27

Post by SQLGeek »

I am sorry for your trouble and best of luck in the repair. I'm interested in finding out how it burst and what kind of material your pipe is. I don't have any advice but I've been following the thread with interest. I know a little bit about a lot of topics but plumbing, not so much, so I'm using it as a learning experience myself.
Psalm 91:2
Post Reply

Return to “Off-Topic”