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How to Work With Plastic
Piping:
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Tool and Material Checklist:
Pipes, Tubes, Fittings, Solvent cement, Cleaner/primer,
Fine tooth saw, Miter box, Knife, Paint brush, Clean
cloths, Teflon plumber's tape, Plastic pipe cutter,
Screwdriver, Nut-driver, Channel-locking pliers, Flaring
tool, Silicone rubber sealant (RTV) or plumber's putty,
Hand cleaner
1.Descriptions of various types of plastic pipe
Plastic (more correctly thermoplastic) for plumbing comes
two ways: in pipe sizes and in tubing sizes. While both
these are sized nominally according to inside diameter,
pipes go by iron-pipe sizes and tubes go by copper-tube
sizes. Pipes and tubes and their fittings, even in the
same designated sizes, cannot be interchanged. With
plastic piping you choose from among a wide selection of
materials.
Rapid technological advances may leave local plumbing
codes behind the times. So, before purchasing your
materials, it's a good idea to consult your city or county
building officials.
DWV stands for the drain-waste-vent system, used to carry
wastes away from house fixtures and to vent the system
above the roof. Sewer pipes are made for carrying
household wastes below ground to a public sewer or private
disposal system.
Drainage pipes are for below-ground use, too, but are
thinner-walled and thus lower in cost. They're usually for
use with non-septic water, such as roof runoff. Tubular
goods are the thin-walled fixture drain and trap parts
used beneath sinks and washbasins. Only two kinds of
plastic tubes will withstand hot water under pressure:
rigid CPVC and flexible PB. The two may be used singly or
together to build corrosion-free, nonelectrolytic
household water supply systems. Because plastic pipe is
nonconducting, it cannot be used for electrical grounding.
PVC pressure pipe should be used only for cold water
outdoors. It is ideal for building lawn-watering and
irrigation systems. PE pipe serves a similar purpose, but
is flexible and cannot be solvent welded. PE is especially
useful as deep-well pipe. Riser tubes are the highly
flexible small-diameter tubes between a water supply
system and faucets, making the faucets easier to concoct.
Riser tubes often fit directly into an adapter on a
fixture shutoff valve.
Plastic pipes for most uses (except tubular products) are
rated by the American Society for Testing and Material
(ASTM). Look for the ASTM designation on each pipe, tube,
and fitting that you buy. This signifies that it meets
ASTM standards. Water supply piping should carry the
National Sanitation Foundation's "NSF-pw" approval,
meaning the parts are suited for carrying potable, or
drinkable, water.
2.Solvent Welding
The simple solvent-welding process used to join many
plastic pipes should be done properly to prevent getting
leaks. Here's how.
Use the two-step method (employing cleaner/primer and
solvent), except with ABS and styrene on which the
one-step method (using solvent only) is usually enough.
1. Inspect the pipe end and fitting socket for cracks,
gouges, dirt, and abrasion. If the pipe end is imperfect,
it can be cut back to good material. A damaged fitting
should be discarded.
2. Unless both the pipe and the fitting are made by the
same manufacturer (a very good idea to look for when
purchasing), test-fit them. The pipe should enter the
fitting, but meet resistance part-way in. Held upside
down, it should hold on and not fall off.
3. Cutting pipes. Cut the pipe off squarely to proper
length using a fine-tooth saw or plastic pipe cutter. (A
hacksaw works well.) Flexible plastic pipes are more
easily severed with a sharp knife, but be careful not to
cut yourself. If you have lots of cutting to do, you can
get a tubing cutter with a special wheel for use on rigid
plastics, or a shear-type cutter for PVC. Then, using a
knife, remove any burrs and chamfer the outer end of the
pipe slightly. Do not sandpaper plastic pipes. It may
remove too much material for successful joining.
4. Cleaning. Using a quality cleaner/primer, clean the
pipe end and fitting socket. (Omit this entire step with
ABS and styrene.) Apply cleaner/primer with a dauber,
brush, or clean cloth to remove grease, oil, dirt, and to
prepare the plastic mating surfaces for solvent cement
action. The surfaces to be joined should be clean and free
of dirt and grease. The pipe should be dry before applying
cement.
5. Solvent welding. Brush on a coat of an ASTM-rated
solvent cement that is matched to the type of pipe and
fitting you are using. It is important that the solvent
cement to be of the right type.
6. Liberally apply cement first to the pipe end and then
apply it sparingly to the fitting socket. Leave no bare
spots. With chemical-resistant PVC and CPVC pressurized
piping, it's a good idea to give the pipe two applications
of cement, one before and one after coating the fitting
socket. With all solvent welding, the dauber or brush used
to apply cement should be at least one-third to one-half
the pipe's diameter.
7. Immediately join pipe and fitting full depth, with a
slight twist that brings it to correct alignment. The
twist breaks up insertion lines in the solvent cement.
Hold the fitting on until the solvent cement grabs
tightly. The fillet of cement around the fitting indicates
that enough solvent cement was used to ensure a leak-free
joint. With PVC and CPVC do not wipe off the fillet. On
the other hand, the one-step solvent-welding method for
ABS and styrene calls for wiping off any excess cement
around the fitting. The joint should be ready for use in
an hour.
Safety precaution. Avoid prolong breathing of solvent
cement and cleaner/primer vapors. For this reason, it's
best to work in a well ventilated area. Cap the cans after
each use. And keep solvent and cleaner away from any open
flame. The precautions appear on the labels. Read and
follow them. Cement on your hands may be removed with hand
cleaner.
Correcting errors. Solvent welding is normally a one-way
process - you can install the fitting, but you cannot get
it off again. Thus when you accidentally put the wrong
fitting on a pipe, you must cut it out and replace it with
the correct fitting.
3.Mechanical Couplings
Some fittings are made for joining pipes and tubes that
cannot be solvent welded.
PE pipe. Simple barb-type plastic or metal fittings are
used with flexible PE pipe. To make the connection, slide
a correctly sized worm-drive clamp over the pipe end and
push the pipe all the way onto the barbed fitting, figure
6. Position the clamp about 1/4 inch from the end of the
pipe and tighten it.
With any flexible tube, be careful not to bend it in too
tight a curve. It can kink the tube, diminish or
completely shut off water flow.
PB tube. Flexible polybutylene tubing for hot and cold
water supply systems is joined by patented O-ring-sealed
mechanical couplings. Each system uses its own coupling,
often not interchangeable with those of other systems.
Follow the instructions for the kind you are using.
Flaring plastic. Both CPVC and PB tubing can be joined to
each other or to metal piping with the use of flare or
compression couplings and adapters. Flaring is done with a
flaring tool. To prevent cracking of a CPVC tube when
flared, the end should be cut off squarely and smoothly,
preferably with a pipe or tubing cutter. It helps to soak
a rigid tube's end in boiling water just before flaring.
Slip-jam-nut couplings. Tubular drainage pipes are joined
by slip-jam-nut coupling. To make up such a coupling,
first install the nut facing its threads. Then install the
correct-sized slip washer with its flat face toward the
nut. If you are sure that none of the parts are made of
ABS plastic, which is adversely affected, you may use
plumber's putty or silicone rubber sealant around inside
the slip jam nut to prevent leaks. Adjust the length and
direction of the tubular parts, then start the nut's
threads with its fitting and tighten.
Most plastic tubular couplings will tighten leak-free by
hand, but it doesn't hurt to five them an extra
quarter-turn with a pair of channel-locking pliers.
Transition unions. For adapting plastic water supply
tubing to threaded metal parts, such as at water heaters
and bathtub/shower valves, a fitting called a transition
union should always be used. Transition unions allow
thermal movements between metal and plastic without leaks.
A male-thread adapter may be used for nonpressurized
concoctions at spots such as shower risers and water
heater relief valve tappings.
Some mechanical couplings made for PB water supply tubing
also work with copper tubing, since the two are the same
size. These permit joining plastic to copper without sweat
soldering. These fittings serve as effective transition
unions.
Flexible fittings. Flexible replacement drain-waste-vent
and sewer/drain pipe fittings are made of soft vinyl.
These come with large worm-drive band clamps that let them
be fastened securely to plastic or metal pipes. A flexible
fitting can be shoe-horned into place even though the
pipes it fits over are immovable.
4.Installing Plastic Piping
While it is the easiest of all to install, plastic piping
has needs all its own.
Mount plastic pipes so they can expand and contract
without damage. Larger DWV pipes are hung by perforated
metal strapping called "plumber's tape" spaced a maximum
of 48 inches apart. Smaller water supply tubes are
attached to the framing by tubing hangers that hold it
tightly to the framing, yet permit back-and-forth
movement. Use hangers 32 inches apart maximum (one hanger
at every other joist). Moreover, be sure not to bind rigid
pipes in at the ends. Leave about 1/4 inch for every 10
feet of pipe.
Provide protection from nails with prepunched nailed-on
steel straps from your dealer. The straps also help to
brace over any notches made in the framing for piping. Be
sure to install air chambers or water hammer arresters at
every fixture and appliance except toilets.
To lead a new drain into an older plastic drain, use slip
couplings. First, mark the portion of the old pipe to be
cut out where the new pipe will join it. Next, saw out the
length of pipe between the marks. Slide a shoulderless
slip coupling onto both ends of the cut pipe, leaving
about 1-1/2-inch exposed for solvent welding.
Position the new fitting ready for coupling onto the old
pipe. There will be pipe stubs on both sides of the joints
for solvent welding. Dope the pipe ends all around with a
heavy coating of solvent cement. Immediately slide the
slip coupling into place, halfway astride the joint. Give
it a slight twist as you do. Hold the alignment for 10
seconds before working on the other end of the fitting ins
the same way.
When plastic sewer and drainage pipes are buried in the
ground, a few common-sense rules should be followed. First
of all , lay the pipes on unexcavated trench bottom, not
on soft fill. Fill could settle unevenly, making low spots
in the pipeline.
Dig out depressions for the couplings so that lengths of
pipe are fully bedded, not bridged between couplings.
Backfill around the pipes should be free from rocks that
might damage the pipe walls. Lacking good on-site
materials, packed sand makes a fine initial backfill. Once
the pipes are well covered, ordinary backfill may be used
the rest of the way. |