Plumbing under part 5 waterlines

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024

Комментарии • 27

  • @jcelcaballocaraballo5395
    @jcelcaballocaraballo5395 2 года назад +8

    I'm a 15 year licensed plumber and I wish I had a teacher like you when I started. Great teacher

  • @thekayfamilybuild
    @thekayfamilybuild Год назад +4

    These videos have been awesome! I'm getting ready to rough in my underslab plumbing. This is really going to help. Thanks!

  • @abumuhammad40
    @abumuhammad40 8 месяцев назад +2

    Where can i buy the sleeve

  • @MyFortressConstruction
    @MyFortressConstruction 2 года назад +3

    Loved the videos. Definitely helped fill some gaps in the under-the-slab drain line department. I would like to add some additional things to the video: PEX shouldn't be exposed to sunlight at all. Some claim more than 72 hours is bad, some 60 days, but regardless, UV light is a Pex killer so protect any of it sticking out into the light. Also, if you have lines running parallel, keep them from touching because they do like to transfer their temperature to each other.
    I hope you keep making videos like this with all the little "do's" and "don'ts" that you can't find anywhere else.

    • @PlumbingSolutionsLLC
      @PlumbingSolutionsLLC  2 года назад

      Well thanks. most of the time when people say " you didn't mention _________' I probably have said it in another video. Lets see if I can answer all of your comments.

    • @MyFortressConstruction
      @MyFortressConstruction 2 года назад +1

      @@PlumbingSolutionsLLC Yeah, plumbing is waaay too vast of a subject to cover it in 100 videos, but I just throw things out there that I find relevant or important. You've done a great job with all of these videos and I know they'll keep helping people. As you can see, I binge-watched through a lot of them. 👍👍

  • @erictorbet8104
    @erictorbet8104 2 года назад +3

    You say the blue sleeve protects PEX from the concrete, so then they must use a different kind of PEX for radiant floor application?

  • @TerryPresson
    @TerryPresson Год назад

    Watched several of your vids. I enjoy them and learn alot

  • @JustJanitor
    @JustJanitor 2 года назад +1

    Thank you again for another great video.

  • @rustycarpenter1219
    @rustycarpenter1219 Год назад

    Appreciate your work thanks very informative

  • @akjoatmon
    @akjoatmon Год назад +1

    Are you concerned at all about the frost line? Also do the separation rules for potable and non potable lines not apply?

  • @TylerTheCompiler
    @TylerTheCompiler Год назад +1

    do the electricians come and lay conduit for the island or do the plumbers do that as well? I guess the island is the only place that they'd have to run conduit, I think.

    • @PlumbingSolutionsLLC
      @PlumbingSolutionsLLC  Год назад +1

      We do the conduit. We are already there why pay the electrician for the trip. I don't think we charge for it, if we do its very little.

  • @alfonsoaguilar9612
    @alfonsoaguilar9612 Год назад

    Hello. Thanks for your amazing video and attention to detail. Who determines if sewer pipe used can be PVC or ABS?

    • @rustycarpenter1219
      @rustycarpenter1219 Год назад

      See what is used around you... look around at some builds. Seems like the west uses abs and midwest/east pvc from what i can gather

  • @rustycarpenter1219
    @rustycarpenter1219 Год назад

    Ive seen pex hot and cold "loops" in many of the houses we build for the bathroom groups out of the slab. Is this common practice? Not sure how to connect back to water heater with a loop rather than a single line. Thanks

    • @rustycarpenter1219
      @rustycarpenter1219 Год назад

      To clarify that means 2 hots and 2 colds coming up in each group

  • @aaronbaraiya3692
    @aaronbaraiya3692 Год назад

    How will the lines connect to the water heater?

  • @ericjames9481
    @ericjames9481 2 года назад +2

    Love your videos, you do a professional show everytime without nagging and help

  • @jet5685
    @jet5685 Год назад

    I’m roughing in my water lines now and wondering if I can run one hot and one cold for a shower, sink, toilet and just T off at the shower or wherever is convenient? Or would I need two separate hots and colds for the sink and shower then just use one of the colds for toilet?

  • @rudygallegos8559
    @rudygallegos8559 Год назад

    Seems like a lot of work, why not just take hot an cold lines to nearest wall to that island sink, then connect them at the top out stage, instead of fighting 30’ of pex just to get it across there, there will be plumbing close to that sink, just a thought

  • @davidrussell3353
    @davidrussell3353 Год назад

    I had to run 2in pex during the winter time it was a dog fight getting it in the ditch lol

  • @bjjsdshepard1
    @bjjsdshepard1 Год назад

    Thank you