Interesting video. I built my home in 1996. It was plumbed with white PEX A to a manifold in the garage. All of the fittings are brass and have a hot water recirculation system connected to the HW side. My home has a crawl space so there are no pipes under the slab. The main water service is 1" PEX A. We did a major remodel 4 years ago and all the walls with fixtures and plumbing pipes were exposed. No issues like you were showing in your video. We are in the middle of a complete interior tear out of a family vacation home and are planning again to use PEX A and a "smart" recirculation system for the HW that uses sensors to start the pump. I have overseen the production of 1500 homes that have had PEX A installed in them and the only warranty issues we have are with screws in the pipes or a pipe that was cut. When the houses are plumbed, they remain under test with water lines under pressure and drain lines filled to the top of the vents. We first switched from copper in 1993 when it started getting stolen out of our homes. We then switched to CPVC which was a nightmare. CPVC freezes easily, it fractures easily, and the glued joints fail too often. In 1995 we switched to Wirsbo PEX A and have not looked back. We no longer use manifolds and it's plumbed in a traditional way. No complaints or lawsuits from homeowners. The only complaints we get about plumbing are the low flow fixtures, particularly shower heads. Also get complaints about how long it takes to get HW to the faucets. They do not recommend recirculation systems for tankless or heat pump water heaters unless you have a "smart re-circulation system" which we do offer as an option. I will tell our warranty team to keep a lookout for the problems you described. Thanks for the information.
I repiped my plumbing to far end of the house after copper line leaked under the slab this was around 2005 with PEX. I still have some of that stuff not even PEX A or B just says PEX. Never had any leaking and I also run a hot water recirculating pump. I used the cheap watts pump and a GE smart outlet with a motion sensor I have on the wall in 2 bedrooms. I program the smart outlet to run for 30 minutes when it detects motion. Then it is off for 30 minutes. Most of the night and day when we are at work it's not running.
@@deezynar Poor PEX loyalist...........houses 60-70 years old plumbed with copper, doing just fine. PEX = houses just 1-2 years old, FULL of leaks and failed piping.......tick tick tick......
@@deezynar Where are the multiple class action lawsuits and settlements from the COPPER pipe manufacturers??? crickets.........crickets..........crickets.........LOL!
A very curious condition of the expansion rings at the 7:00 minute mark. The opinion stated is the pipe is being attacked from within and causing the pipe to turn from white to yellow. How could that be true when the expansion rings, which are NOT in contact with the fluid inside the pipe, be just as uniformly yellowed as the pipe???? That section sure looks like it was yellowed from something external instead of the internal fluid. Age, heat, UV, caustic or acidic air environment, perhaps???
Because it is from the inside and continues to work its way to the outer while traveling through it has an affect on the connections. If it breaks down the interior then it will makes its way to the connection
OK - this is why the Uponor PEX is failing. As part of the manufacturing process of the white PEX tube is skinned with a red outer cover. In order to make the red and white bond, the tube is run through a heat tube that fuses the two parts together. This heat process causes the plastic to continue to cross link on a molecular level. The increased cross linking causes the material to become brittle. That is why you will see stress fractures in the location that the assembly tube expands the pipe to fit over the fitting. you will see linear micro cracking at the transition of the pipe/fitting joint just beyond the white ring - in the area that the tube necks down to normal size. I speak from direct experience. We had a brand new custom home built in 2013 and the Uponor PEX product was used. Blue for cold and red for hot. You will only have the problem with the red. This is due to the continuation of the cross linking of the plastic due to the hot water in the pipe. In the end, the entire hot water system pipe runs had to be removed from the walls, ceiling. All this in a two story home. A real disaster. All that expensive wall texture
Except that Uponor white also has leaks and cracks... I think your red is more likely to leak than blue because heat exacerbates the premature aging of the pipe, but examples of failed white Uponor are on the web.
I have white pex A that leaked mid pipe. We have chloromine in our water here. And if you watched the pex B video, it's extruded differently. He uses the Pex A fittings and collars for the increased flow over the Pex B fittings restriction from trying to not use expansion in the installation. The B pipe can handle expansion as well as A pipe can.
This material gets used a lot in multi-family or even commercial projects looking to tighten their budget. How long would you say until systems operating under higher temperatures (110-180) will last? I will gladly do my best to talk customers out of using PEX.
I have been using uponor for at least 20 years live in western Pennsylvania. And have found that the splitting seems to occur mostly if the pipe is very cold and it’s expanded. May seem like a coincidence or not but I have had zero leaks from any install that I’m aware of. Thanks for your insight.
Hi plumber brother, another thing that kills pex pipe is sunlight. I lived in florida for 4 years, a couple of my coworkers told me was that a lot of developers bought truck loads of pex straight from uponor and left it all outside as houses and condos were being built. Some pipe sat outside in the sun for a year, I did a few service calls for leaks on pex a. Even the homeowner in a development told me the same thing about having pipe left outside and trying to sue due to leaks, but was to hard to prove.
@@geneticdisorder1900 yes that is another contributing factor. And poly gas tubing has the same issue in fact in western pa our gas companies won’t allow pipe any older than 3 years to be installed and its code that it has to be stored inside or out of direct sunlight. So it’s looking like it’s not defective materials as much as the environmental elements are impacting the integrity!
@Genetic Disorder: Good point. All distributors and users should know that PEX is not intended to be stored outdoors, and that even when stored indoors, PEX should be kept in the original packaging prior to installation for protection against UV/sunlight and other potential hazards. PEX pipe is not to be stored for extended period of time and should be installed within 30 days of exposure to UV light. If subjected to UV exposure for more that 30 days, such PEX material should be discarded and replaced with fresh pipe.
Most Uponor failures are not at the expansion, but literally anywhere on the pipe. Still, making sure the pipe is at least at room temperature before expansion is smart.
This is eye opening, we have been repairing and repiping Uponor pipe for years. I have been in contacted with Uponor trying to get confirmation on what is causing this deterioration in the pipe. However I have been given multiple answers, like high water pressure, high water temperature, and high pressure with high water temperature. We have always use Nibco B pex and have never have to go back and repair or replace pipe. We been in business for almost 20 years and give our customers 10 year full warranty on repipe.
I am glad I first bought the PEX B crimper when I started using PEX, forcing me to use all PEX B. So far, I have not heard of the B having any bad leaking problems. I assume at least some of A's problems comes from the pipe being stretched out for the joint fitting, whereas the B seals with a crimped ring without stretching the pipe.
I use clamps, (but would have no problem with crimps) and got a ton of crap for it and not using uponor. Zero failures. IMO, pex B is a better product.
WOW - am I reeeeeeally glad I've been using Pex B whenever Pex was requested by the customer - this is gonna bring back memories of the Quest fittings failure and lawsuits !!
I'm still a believer in copper pipes. I just did a remodel on a 100 year old building. The copper pipes were installed in the early 50s. It was still functioning. The only reason we changed it was to go to bigger supply lines.
Your crazy! The only way copper is worth a shit is if the PH of the water is over 7. Any water with a PH of lower than 7 will have pinholes in copper in just a few years. FACTS!
@bryantaylor4139 there is more to plumbing than repiping houses. Copper is more versatile because it can handle more pressure and vacuum and it can brazed. Copper isn't the best in every situation but neither is pex.
Thank you for putting out this video. I was considering switching to pex A for remodels. Somehow, RUclips randomly pulled up your video. I don't know if pex A has different brands that may not have a problem, but I will stick with pex B. I have found only one failure with pex B, and that was where someone used a plastic pex fitting with a stainless crimp ring. It completely came off pipe. I appeared to be crimped too close to the end of the pipe and not centered on fitting barbs. I prefer brass fittings and copper crimp rings. The only issue is that sometimes the crimp tool is hard to get into tight spots. I would like to see your preferred fittings and tools. Thanks again.
This is a known issue because of the way that they colored the pipe. All uponor pipe being sold now is without color. This video is just click bait and fear mongering at it's finest.
I’ve been using this 13 years in maine. I have cut into some of the pipe that has highly acidic water after about ten years to do various repairs. Although it becomes harder to expand at ten years after installation it’s still expanding and then contracting and have had zero leaks. I cannot say the same for copper or any other pipe. The water here eats everything but then pex a holds up the best.
I would have to say i have never had an issue with wirsbo/uponor pex in 20 plus years. I did leave a piece of one inch aquapex outside for maybe a week in the weather . [Summer time] . When i expanded it the pex looked like safety glass that had shattered. Didn't leak but i replaced as a precautionary. I have always said dont let anyone install pex that is sitting in the bed of their pick up. I would also like to see a lab analysis of the water quality where these pex problems occurred.
When I built my home 33 years ago I installed Wirsbo in the slab except for one loop I used Stadler PEX C. I was so unsure of this new plastic pipe that I did the radiant on the second floor with copper. Since then I have used PEX A in the snowmelt system on the porch and steps, the dog kennel and a 2400 sf shop. I have never had a leak or any type of failure. I have seen PEX that I left outside uncovered for a few years and it snaps like stale pretzel sticks. I use Uponor exclusively for heating systems as the fittings maintain the ID of the tubing and have less pressure drop. I don't really use it for plumbing as I prefer copper. We have one area here that uses chloramine to sterilize water. That water destroys water softner resin in 10 years and turns anything plastic or rubber into junk.
@@IntegrityRepipeInc Here is a short upload of my system, you can see the early Wirsbo manifolds and the PEX C. Stadler was using the electron beam crosslinking at that time. Tried to get a date code off the pipe but it is not legible. It seems the A PEX is having trouble with chlorine, this home has a well so that is no concern but the system id filled with a 30% glycol mixture for over thirty years and that seems to have no effect. Unfortunately the imperfections found in the Zurn piping make it unsuitable for radiant heating systems as repair fittings under slab are unacceptable. ruclips.net/video/CzMDt2YoaSI/видео.html
Thank you for the information. I’m in south west PA myself. We use a lot of HePex and some AquaPex. We’ve never had any issues with HePex we’ve put in heating system and only once have we had an issue with AquaPex. The location we had the issue with AquaPex was in a municipality that has such high amounts of chlorine in the water that you can smell it gassing out if you put water in a pan and sit it on a counter.
Thank you for the information and great video. I was dead set on Uponor pex a expansion. Just received my Milwaukee expansion tool as well. I'm going through your videos now for maybe another option.
I own a plumbing company in Toronto. We service high rise condos throughout the city. We have been running into issue quite often on domestic hot water risers. Pin holes and splits. Just terrible!
Any heat such as hot water will reduce the memory effect of Pex A. How long before a leak? Who knows. Guess 10 years normally but under hot water, maybe as little as 5 years
You're right... it's just your opinion. But it isn't as simple as you claim and PEX B is not immune to problems caused by chlorine as the antioxidants added to the PEX (either type ) are sacrificial and ALL PEX is subject to this degradation. Has nothing to do with "undulations" or any other physical characteristic. It's chemistry but only in severe cases will PEX fail in short order. Don't plumb your pool with it. Undulations? That's just nonsense. The manufacturing process of PEX B uses silane chemistry the antioxidant are not exposed to free radical during manufacturing... but PEX A chemistry (using peroxides) is easily compensated by starting with more antioxidants. Even if you think silane chemistry results in more oxidation resistance, that is still chemical composition and not a physical property.
Agree with you 100%. You're obviously knowledgeable in the industry. Nice to see someone who can separate the accurate from the ill-informed. No fault to anyone, I think we're all here trying our best to understand the same thing.
15 years ago I said that stretching pex wasn't a good idea. I'm so glad I Have Never used overpriced uponor garbage. I'll stick to pex b and my ss camps. 15 years and Not 1 failure....
Thank you for the information! I just bought a a Milwaukee expansion tool this year, but have yet to use it on a job (I am returning it asap). Does this happen on white Pex A? I can't believe this is happening? After the polybutelyne pipe disaster we have this. The amount of waste generated from repiping is crazy.
I built my house in 1992. There is around 3500 feet of Wirsbo hePex in my radiant floor heat of my basement shops and living room. This pipe was colorless translucent with smooth interiors. It looks and is as good as when I installed it. The fittings were brass threaded compression type with internal ferrules. Now, this, of course, does not get a lot of water changes in a closed loop heating service and the iron from the Hypertherm boiler does color the water grey. Now, for domestic water inside, I only use copper with lead free solder. The same goes for my heating headers and water/air heat exchangers. If I build another building, I would use the same product specifications and construction practices.
I wouldn’t use copper, I’d use pex A or B and install a flow-tech anti-scale system or a whole home filtration system and u should be good according to what he’s saying about the carcinogenic’s causing the pipe to crack
The local water here is very hard, so it eats copper pipe from the inside out. The copper pipe in my house was eaten up just as bad that pex. I installed pex A with a water filtration and softener system. If the water is full of chemicals that destroy piping, it seems like removing the chemicals is the better than trying to find a magical pipe that won’t be damaged by all types of impure water.
I have been running a caustic soap liquid (pH>13) for 4 years in clear Pex A pipe (don't know the brand...yet). The chemical will break down the brass fittings in a few years but there has been ZERO attack on the white Pex A 1/2" pipe. You made several references to Breakpoint Chlorination but no clarifications as to what it is or how it is a problem. Is this a process being used prior to delivery or in the building where the problem is being seen ?
About 10 or so years ago the municipal water authorities switched from Chlorine to Chlor-amine (sp) for water purification. Breakpoint apparently is a provider of Chlor-amine. He did very briefly state this in his video.
@@69dblcab That's nuts. Chloramine is a terrible disinfectant. The only advantage it has over free chlorine is that it's very stable and doesn't degrade nearly as much as free chlorine in sunlight. Other than that, it's essentially worthless.
@@69dblcab As one who has been involved in pool water for about 60 years, I have to say that this reference to Chloramine makes no sense. Free Chlorine is a disinfectant that easily"decays" into chloramide. When this occurs, the water obtains the typical smell and it becomes totally useless for sanitation.
Omg we just had a carbon copy of a leak in our house from an uponor PEX pipe. Contacting our insurance and class action lawyers, thank you so much for this video.
I’ve never used it, since it came out I didn’t like it. Glad I’ve never installed any of this junk. Thank you for sharing this, I’ll be showing this to my customers and contractors that ask me for it.
Hi Joe - what city did the yellowed PEX come from? I have properties in Orange, Anaheim and Villa Park that had PEX-A installed in 2000-2010 and none are showing that yellowing. I wonder if what you're seeing is related to specific water conditions.
Thank you so much for this explanation ! And No, we do not just have to accept it ! It appears it is faulty ! That 50% of new housing is using this stuff is scary when purchasing another house and not knowing if you will have to repipe !
Interesting... Have been working with Upononr PEX-a pipe for over 20 years with no issues. I frequently attach new PEX into existing old PEX pipe so I can see what condition the old PEX is. Never noticed such interior damage as described here. Must be something happening locally, in your region of operation. Uponor discontinued red coated and blue coated pipes couple of years ago, and replaced them with clear pipe with red or blue print. Over 50% of new homes in US are built with PEX pipe, and PEX is choice of materials in my area as well. As far as Class Action Law Suit goes - well, there always be such law suits floating around. In 2021, City of Falsom, CA, filed class action law suit on behalf of 2,000 new homeowners because of pin hole leaks in new copper pipes. Similar Class Action law suit was filed in the well publicized Los Rivero case, filed in 2022 in So.California. Reason, leaking copper pipes. And we don't even wanna start with galvanized pipe and its century old problems. So leaks happen in all available materials - not only PEX. .PEX is a new kid on the block. We just have to accept it. Thank you
I’m in central Florida and I’ve never seen the inside of pex look like that. I’ve cut pex out on houses with water softener, plain tap, wells, chlorinators, and UV .. 1yr old, 5, 10, etc.. in my area CPVC is king. But I believe he has the best intentions but I feel that it’s Misleading. No plumbing products on the market have never been subject to a case action. NONE. They all have pros and cons.
We have a house that was built in the 2005-2006 time frame with Wirsbo AquaPEX-A white translucent pipe. About 4 years ago, one of the pipes developed a very small crack and started spraying water inside the wall. We had that fixed. Then a year later, another crack / water leak. Then another, and another. We sent about 6 or 8 defective pipes to Uponor and they claim that none of the cracking in the pipes was their responsibility. This has caused so much damage in our house that we've had the house re-piped in the last month (Nov. 2022). With the re-piping, repairs to the walls, texturing, painting, etc. it's cost us over $ 50,000. Most of the Wirsbo piping looks ok, but their are sections where the pipe is discolored and the printing on the pipe is severely faded. All the cracks / leaks have occurred in the sections of the pipe where discoloration occurred. P.S. A neighbor a few door away, has the same Wirsbo AquaPEX pipe too with same cracking / water leaks. They too have had their house re-piped recently.
It is to bad that you did not call me. You have to prove/ provide evidence to prove your case. Now that the evidence is removed you can no longer prove your case.That being said if you have another neighbor that has a problem call me first. I can teach you how to collect the evidence and have their insurance adjuster call me. What city are you in please. The public likes to believe that it only happens in my area and not in theirs.
Hey Keith, I am going through the warranty process right now with Uponor but they are taking forever and we are at one week a leak now which is really bad. This is obvious that this is a defective pipe issue so it would see that Uponor should cover this. This worries me that you said they would not cover this for you. You had to pay the full $50,000 out of pocket? Did insurance help any?
Thanks for sharing this info Joe. I'm about to start construction on a new large home for a client. He prefers that I use copper. Cost is not an issue, but everyone is telling me to use Pex. And it would be much easier - especially since this is rammed earth construction (24" solid exterior and 14" solid interior walls) and running pipe either in the ceiling and down a larger PVC tube in the walls or PVC pipe with Pex fed thru those larger pipes. Copper would be much more difficult, obviously.
I have a feeling that this piping was exposed to excessive UV and degraded. People forget that PEX is not to be stored in sunlight or exposed continuously.
Thank you Joe, you helped me make the decision to stick with my first decision of using Zurn Pex B, I almost went to Uponor Pex A, because of the flexibility alone. I've been searching online to find more information and came across your video. You very well may have saved me thousands of dollars and a huge headache in the future! Thanks again!
You're thanking him for misleading you? It isn't as simple as he claims and PEX B is not immune to problems caused by chlorine as the antioxidants added to the PEX (either type ) are sacrificial and ALL PEX is subject to this degradation. Has nothing to do with "undulations" or any other physical characteristic. It's chemistry but only in severe cases will PEX fail in short order. Don't plumb your pool with it. Undulations? That's just nonsense. The manufacturing process of PEX B uses silane chemistry the antioxidant are not exposed to free radical during manufacturing... but PEX A chemistry (using peroxides) is easily compensated by starting with more antioxidants. Even if you think silane chemistry results in more oxidation resistance, that is still chemical composition and not a physical property. Then micro-crack problem resulted from the process of getting the colored coatings to bond and that, as stated, decreased the resistance to oxidation. decreased... not eliminated.
I got into the trade In ‘95 doing copper. Got “forced” to switch to B in ‘08. Did some A in ‘18, was almost convinced it was better, but my area (small town) suppliers don’t carry A, only B. Still doing B with brass fittings and copper smash rings. Personal use I would use L copper, if I was building my dream house I’d use hard K copper. Under slab I sleeve B. Which there has been a lot of slab houses in the last 5 years.
I built my home in 2003. All upinor domestic water and total infloor heat. I have replaced at least 12 brass fittings due to failure. I do have somewhat acidic domestic well water that i now treat. At the time i thought the brass fittings would be better than the plastic fittings but i have changed my mind. I do not have all home runs and am waiting for the few brass fittings in the concealed structure to fail. Master plumber with 49 years in the trade until retirement 2 years ago. The good news is that all of the failed fittings were exposed and easily replaced. I would advise to use as many poly fittings as possible.
I have Uponar AquaPEX used in my home when it was RePiped in 2019. Since then I have had both leaks described in this video, 1st one was right at a joint ring, so small that it took the plumber a week to locate, and repair. 1:27 the next leak was 6 months later, same stretch of pipe but this time 6” from the repaired joint. Both leaks were tiny tiny streams of water, my FLO leak detector my insurance company forced me to install indicated that less than 1 gallon a day was leaking and was probably a leaky facet or toilet. The leak detector is currently showing a small leak, which I cannot locate. The previous leaks ended up dripping through the ceiling drywall, this new leak I assume will do the same soon.
Some municipal water sources "sanitize" the output water from the treatment plant through to the consumer wide with chloramine to presumably reduce coliform and other biological contamination. The problem is that chloramine is a terrible disinfectant. But it's more stable than free chlorine, which makes it cheaper. I'm not sure why this guy is using the term "breakpoint chlorination" (it's most properly used in the use of "shock" chlorination where large concentrations of free chlorine are added to water to drive out the chloramines.
All municipalities add disinfectant to their water. The disinfectant of choice 90% of the time will be chlorine or chloramine (chlorine+ammonia). Chloramine is more stable. Water will have a chlorine demand caused by contaminants and chemistry and that demand must be met in order to have free chlorine available to maintain a residual to protect the water from biological contamination. The point at which this demand is met is its breakpoint. Excess chlorine is available to cause oxidation of many things, mainly using organic material such as plastic. This includes RO filters you may have under your sink. Those always have activated carbon prefilters to remove the chlorine. Not only does your water taste better, it protects the RO membrane, which is highly sensitive to chlorine. What color will plastic turn when oxidized by chlorine? First yellow. Then black. I think he is on to something here. Your mileage will vary depending on your municipality’s chlorine/chloramine dosage and the chlorine demand in your water. That’s why there are plenty of examples of success and mounting examples of failure.
Check the print on the pipe. They will list a bunch of ASTM standards that tell which fittings they are approved for. But in general, PEX-a and b can use all the fitting systems with the following caveat: only a few PEX-b products can use the expansion fittings (like the Zurn expandable PEX-b). When in doubt, check the ASTM list on the pipe print. If you see "F1960", that's expansion. F2159 and F1807 are the poly and brass fittings that can be used with copper crimp or stainless steel press sleeves. ASME 1061 is the Push-to-Connect like SharkBite, but not all PEX wants to play with that system. Check the print on the pipe.
I am a master plumber with 28 years of experience.I have been using uponor for around 15 years with zero problems or issues.The only thing i can think of is improper storag before installation.
Interesting. I purchased my house about 7 years ago. When it was repipled, I had it redone with Upenor-A (if I recall correctly). It was done with all white, and a home-run configuration. I will have to check all my connections next time I am in the crawl space. Got it will be a pain to redo if needed.
I think that this problem is more an indication of the almost universal carcinogenic “drinking” water across the US of A, not even a third world country in this respect. Flint water is everywhere and if it eats your pipe, just think of what it does to your body. In Europe which in some places has preserved ancient Roman standards of clean drinking water as the most important public health measure, that problem does not exist.
The Flint, MI water was acidic because of the incompetence of the water utility not treating the new water source with corrosion inhibitors. The low pH water attacked the lead pipes, causing lead to leach into the water. If Flint had treated the water with corrosion inhibitors (phosphates), there would have been no issues. The problem was the pipes, which are lead from being built a long time ago where lead was common practice for water distribution - as long as it's treated. Chicago is one of the largest consumers of phosphates for drinking water treatment. Copper piping is also very harmful under acidic water conditions, as it will also leach into the water. Copper poisoning can cause liver failure and death
@@TierNone_LarperatoR I've had an RO unit in my house for drinking water for at least 20 years. Tastes better than bottled water and RO units are a lot less expensive to buy (and filter replacement too) than it used to be with many competitors out there. Also good to have a remineralizer cartridge on the output of the unit or holding tank for taste.
Is this specific to color of Uponor? Is this specific to certain geographic areas’ w elevated chlorine? Are there any variables applied to the pipes that are failing that are unique? I apologize if my question is answered already. Erik
I ve ran miles and miles of copper had a hard time not running straight a particular pipe with nice and shinny joints from properly cleaning flux off the outside of the pipe....nice Ridgid bracing Took me alot of struggle to make loops bend pipe over to nearest stud to snail....trying to teach guys how to drill straight holes or run waste and vents straight....but I uncover way more failure of copper pin holes electrolytes pipe now....and have only uncovered Uponor failure on yes red pipe near hot water tankless unit that temp setting had been over righted and from looks of somebody used a torch and cooked it probably trying to hurry up the pipe memory....1 time! So what ever they are putting in your water or not condition the water I would say DONT WORRY so much about the pipe instead everyone's HEALTH!
I have pex b about 10 yrs old that was installed using cinch rings. No pipe failures but one ring failed at the water heater. The failed ring was the code distance from the heater and was attaching the pex to npt threaded fittings. However a galv nipple was use so the may be galvanic corrosion. This was a repipe from copper that was pin-holing everywhere including over the electric service panel.
I just re-routed a section of Uponor PEX that I installed 7 years ago and the inside and outside look as good as the day I installed it. I'd be interested in a more scientific look at what is going on, rather than this approach where we have no idea if the PEX was installed properly, stored properly (not exposed to excessive UV light), water conditions, etc.. The video is alarmist, without offering much in the way of evidence, other than some cut open PEX that is repeatedly held up to the camera for 10 minutes. As for the lawsuit, we live in a litigious society.
I had just about decided that I needed to "remodel" some of my copper plumbing. I thought I might as well get some Pex "A" and use that. I live in the country, no chlorine or chemicals in the water. SO would "A" Pex or any upinor have any chance of failure in well water plumbing?
I'm not questioning your conclusions but the Uponor pipe I installed in our cottage when I replumbed it back in 11 years ago is still white and hasn't leaked a drop and I have well water with a high concentration of iron. I'd agree the the pipes you sectioned have been attacked/damaged but by what? What was in these systems where this pipe was used that caused this? Any pipe, whether PVC, copper, brass, PEX can be damaged if it's being subjected to some sort of chemical that it was not intended to be used with.
I believe you said this was due to chlorine in the water. I'm here in Florida and we are inundated with chlorine in the water because the water is so bad. If this holds true, then what better place to test this project. I do home repair and remodeling and was looking into changing from CPVC AND COPPER. Now I'm having second thoughts. I'm still old school. so I'm a copper man myself. Tried and true over many years. Copper isn't perfect, but it lasts longer a whole lot longer than 7 years. Thanks for the great info and the effort to letting us know. I'll keep an eye out as well as an ear for anything pertaining to this. Thanks again.
I repipe homes that are 6 years old all the time. they are copper failures. Copper is not copper any more. Copper made in the USA has recycled copper in it that is hot washed from China. I am not a fan anymore and I purchase copper 6 days a week since 1990.
@@IntegrityRepipeInc Sounds good. I'll take your word. This country is so far gone and we don't manufacture products like we used too. So I'm going to go with your recommendation by using Zurn Pex B. Now I have a reason to buy the spreader tool also. Thank you very much for the info.
If you have any concerns about chlorine in your public water supply, then two things you should consider: (1) order yourself an inexpensive test kit and confirm just how much chlorine is in your water and (2) possibly consider installing an active charcoal filter at your water supply entry point. Both are likely to be a lot cheaper steps before spending a lot of money on pipe. If you choose copper, just make sure it is type K or L and not M. The vast majority of copper pipe failure is due to the thinner-walled (and cheaper) type M. But just keep in mind, copper installation is a lot more laborious and expensive than PEX (of any brand). So I would really confirm first if chlorination is really a problem before you make any decision. Be informed. Be wary of stuff you get told on RUclips. Good luck.
@@IntegrityRepipeInc A couple of decades ago, I worked as a claims adjuster for specialty insurance, one was for homes thru their utility company. We authorized so many repipes for entire zones in FL and PA due to the copper pinhole leaks from the water treatment. At first it was repairs, then as we noticed the pattern, the first time a customer called in for a leak, we have servicers go out and inspect for a repipe. Cheaper in the long run.
@@thebluelunarmonkey was it type m or L that was installed ? Were they on well or city ? Any house on city water has to be type L where I live in New England and that’s due to pressure fluctuation issues. Type m is only rated for 100 psi and we have areas where the standing pressure can be 90psi during the day. Only time I dealt with pin holes was at my brothers house in Maryland, some hack used type m for city water.
I 100% totally agree with you.... I am offering people that have wirsbo pipe in their homes a 2 cubic foot back washing carbon filter that we install before the water softener to take out all the chlormines and chlorine in the water..... I think that this is a preventitive measure that could extend the life of the plumbing system
Uponor pipe is a great product. Any home with high pressure and or high chloride content is bound to leak at some point Copper is no different other that the molecular aspects. Anytype of pex or plastic pipe will always create this occurrence. If your repiping a house.. always offer a hole home water purification system in addition to repipe. Not a salt systems as many states outlawed due salt content poluting ground water if its a discharge design. Chlorine and ammonia (common ingredients to treat water) combination makes chloromine . Detrimental to any system out there even copper. What you saying is partially true. The product might be at fault to a degree.. but nothing like quest. Change the quality of your water when you do a repipe. That will change the results drastically.
I searched up Zurn Pex B, as he recommended it in the video and comments. The first video that pops up is him talking about Zurn PEX-B failures. This is the only guy I’ve seen talking about Uponor PEX-A failures after months of casual researching different PEX applications and brands. Is he just making these videos for views and ad revenue or what?
I duplex built in 1947 as copper plumbing so it is 75 years old and still good. 30 years from now there will be a big repipe issue replacing all the plastic.
There may be more to this. It is stated very very clear never in any instance is pex allowed to see light. Natural, florescent, led, nothing. Paint it, insulate it, whatever but uv will damage it. Is it possible it's from that?
Also additional question. Chemically Pex B is the same. Smooth pipe may slow the process due to lower reaction surface area but it is same polyethylene chemically.
@Integrity Repipe inc Chlorine as a desinfection and very aggressive agent was present in drinking water as a standard additive for a long-term before providing some new standards in drinking water preparation. Agree that PEX-b pipes with silane crosslink additives are more chemically stable than PEX-a ones (especially at high temperatures).
This explains why i am a pex b fan with stainless fittings and why i cut so much of this shit out that's flooding houses. Usually near the fitting but sometimes middle of bloody pipe. Ridiculous for being 6 years old.
The issues seem to be very random, with certain plumbers claiming it's failing everywhere, and other areas where the only failures are due to faulty installation. And most plumbers over 60 claiming nothing is safe except copper.
Hello there thanks for the information. Have you experienced these issues with radian floor heating? As cloded system sometime with additives in the fluid as well is this a problem.? Anyone answering I am grateful.
I have. Sharkbite, beyond its hideous cost, needs periodic inspections, meaning you either need inspection panels all over your dang house or to replace fittings very frequently. Either is unacceptable in my opinion. I view SharkBite fittings as simply an emergency backup plan.
Interesting. I just replaced a PEX manifold. One line had deteriorated. I never encountered this before. Tubes were not yellowed inside. Manifold has a "W" logo on it. House was built in 2015. The failed tube has calcium inside and on the outside. It looks like the tubing split. Calcium is on the supply side of the tubing and not at the entry of the manifold into the tubing. Oh, well. I'm grateful I wasn't sweating copper in the crawl space. Thanks.
Two points.... One of the very first things I learned about PEX around 20 years ago is that it is easily deteriorated by uv light. You definitely do not want to buy pipe that has been left outside very long. Second point... I've installed miles of PEX, never had an issue or call back using brass or copper fittings with stainless steel pinch rings. The only issue I have seen is pinholes in wirsbo PEX wish I had a service call to repair a leak above a drywall ceiling.
Very true. Coiled PEX comes wrapped in clear plastic wrap. Exposure to UV light deteriorates PEX pipe so that clear plastic wrap prevents UV light from hitting the pipe. Plastic wrap should always stay on, until you use up full roll. ( You start pulling out pipe from inner coil outwards ). Also, PEX should not be stored. It should be used right away, not later than 3 months after purchase. If it is older thant 3 months, don't use it. Also, PEX should not be installed where it is exposed to direct light,. I am working with PEX for over 20 years and never had any problem with it, either. Good to know pin holes in PEX may happen, yet, never seen one, yet. Thank you
This is very disturbing information. Has there been similar failures to the Uponor Hepex tubing. I'm a plumber who still uses copper on all my domestic water piping, but have installed miles of Hepex in radiant floors. I've used their product since 1991, when it was manufactured in Sweden. I have never witnessed a failure of any kind with the product.
Thanks much for the information. A material failure lawsuit should be the same lawsuit. We call it a joinder because whether it's by the joint or the middle of the pipe, it's still a material failure. I'm only a paralegal, which is sort of like a plumber's apprentice two or three years in, so I'm probably just as confused as you.
What water conditions are causing this chemical burning? Is this an issue on both city and well water? Are there certain things in the water specifically that are causing this? I'm building a new house right now and planning to use Uponor A on a well water setup. Thanks.
Hi superspeeder. I will suggest that you install Zurn Pex B on your new home that is what I installed in my home. Well water may not have chlorine or ammonia you can have it professionally checked.
@@TheNismo03 Not True. The new white/Clear pipe is not new at all, it is the old Wirsbo pipe with new label. The White pipe fails all the time. Undulations in the pipe walls allow the chloramines to attach the the pipe walls. You should check the video I did on that subject.
Well water will most likely not have chlorine. You can get a fairly inexpensive chlorine test kit from various sites on line, including amazon. Also, check if the water filter system you intend to use removes chlorine. Many that use activated carbon will remove chlorine. If that is between your water ingress and all the Uponor, then this is possibly a non-issue.
This happens with copper as well. This is due to the dedicated recirculation line (constant water moving 24/7) and chlorine or chloramine in your water. First, cut out and replace the bad section at the elbow. Get your recert line on a timer and get a water filtration system to remove any chlorine or chloramine. For chlorine, you need a Carbon Filter. For Chloramine, you need a Catalytic Carbon filter. I used this system for the chloramine in our water. Removes all the chloramine. Fleck 5600SXT Auto Backwash Catalytic Carbon Filter 1.5 from A Plus Water
I re-routed my plumbing with garden hoses. The thread makes it easy so you don’t need any clamping/crimping Basically you just screw everything in together and use drop ears for 90° turns.
Good luck with that. Considering you have to get "permission" from the municipality to sue a municipality. Cheaper to pull all the PEX and install copper.
Crazy. I caused a whole bunch of trouble when I told one of my company's customer about this situation. His is starting to go after 5 years. I will definitely listen to you if I go off on my own. I bet whole house filters would do a lot to mitigate this. And where are all the pureflow fittings hiding? I'm certain that that's going to be the next thing.
I’m a new construction plumber. I’ve plumbed thousands of houses since 1990. Went from copper to cpvc in early 2000’s to pex a in 2016. I always shied away from crimp because the tend to bleed over time. I think its due to thermal expansion of the different materials at different rates. I’m an expansion guy and mainly use uponor. But have been using riifo, legend(pert) lately coarse of the in ability to get uponor as they switched to the clear pipe with colored lettering. Have not used zern. They allow expansion on their pipe now. I know expanding pert and pex b in the winter is not feasible because it splits. I’m just an install monkey, all this is confusing cause who the heck do you listen to? Down south they use cpvc, cali uses pex b…they ALL have a failure point of one reason or another. Copper for me at this point isn’t an option i will offer. The copper has a huge pinhole failure rate now, the stuff is stupidly expensive, and frankly I’m just not going to re-tool to get back into it. Maybe switch to zern and expand? Or maybe this uponor failure is area/water municipality specific. Who the hell knows. But i will add, your like the only uponor fail videos out there, this must be a california chlorine thing. Not really seeing it in the Midwest.
I'm in Alabama. I've been installing PEX since 2005 and can't remember the last time I even used a piece of cpvc except occasionally for a repair. Nowadays we pretty much just grab a shark bite couple and transition to PEX. Typical for us is white PVC underground and PEX above ground. No plastic ever left out in the sun.
Seems like it definitely a chloramine chlorine issue, I've noticed it here as a recently on a few of my projects. Lot of discoloration at the ring and the pipe. Did a job in 2013 had made a repair on a manifold half inch supply on a red hotline. Couldn't figure out why there was a crack a fracture on the actual ring splitting. Yeah it's pretty serious man after all this time basically starting to present itself with the material failure. It's a pretty s***** feeling.
We have these leaks in our home. Our pipes are 7 years old. We have had 9 pinhole leaks in various pipes. All on the hot line. We are replumbing now. Have you seen any evidence of the blue lines breaking? I am concerned that we replace this all and is a few years find the cold line needed to be replaced too.
Damn! As a home inspector I have often wondered when this might happen. Seems every time we invent a thin wall mechanically connected supply line they tend to crack
I did a house in poly before the ban used crimp rings 25 years later a new owner bought the house and had me change out the poly to pex when the gutted the house I looked at the work at all the joints and they were fine no leaks no problems other than it was poly then I did a residential house sprinkler System in Uponor although it had no leaks at the time I do not trust this system you are using Plastic to hold plastic leak proof, do not trust this system use cinch or crimp rings but they even have their own draw backs but over all it works best.
@@jfbeam : Forever in a house should be 70 years. I still like quality copper. Who knows what chemicals from the Pex will leech into drinking water piping in 20 years… Copper is pretty inert material.
The biggest problems we have had are the outer clamp rings splitting on both Worsbo and Openor brands , we switched to the copper crimp rings and so far so good .
Never had any trouble and as a commercial contractor dealing in mostly massive multi family the only time i have seen anything like this is from 1. exposure to UV and 2. Exposure to extreme heat or cold and I mean extreme .
So what type of Pex do you recommend now? Is my new expansion tool worthless now? I can’t find Zurn anywhere. HD sells Apollo here is west Texas. Should I stay away from Apollo? Do I only use white now? Thanks for any help!
Fantastic video! I'm sorry but I just don't trust A. I really don't like B much better. I rather hard pipe with cpvc. It's a little more of a pain due to its rigidity, but I know when it's in there and protected, it's good. It does get brittle over time. With all pipe there are downfalls I suppose. Copper can become weakened from chemicals and minerals. Cpvc gets dry and brittle. Pex A has the faults you described. Pex B has 4,000 crimps which are each potential fail points in time. So I guess we all have to weigh our options and what pipe works best for us depending on location and what our water is like. Great video again!
" I rather hard pipe with cpvc" Seriously? Why do just go all the way back to galvanized? Like CPVC and Butylene, galv was a huge mistake and just a sign of the times when it was used for everything, including venting!
I seems that uponor products aren't sold in my area. I searched the Lowes, Home Depot, Ace Hardware, True Value. Apollo or Sharkbite pipe and fittings are what they have.
So long story short use Pex B & you should size up to 3/4 to prevent restrictions?Any preference as to crimp or ring style clamps?I personally prefer the crimp.
I would still argue Pex A (current un-colored version) is the way to go. Fittings are all poly plastics, so no need to worry about deterioration from water. Make sure you use pipe wrap insulation and your pex A will last longer than a good 20 years or so. If you're insistent on B, then I would use crimp rings for sure... those cinch rings are a train wreck!
Interesting video.
I built my home in 1996. It was plumbed with white PEX A to a manifold in the garage. All of the fittings are brass and have a hot water recirculation system connected to the HW side. My home has a crawl space so there are no pipes under the slab. The main water service is 1" PEX A. We did a major remodel 4 years ago and all the walls with fixtures and plumbing pipes were exposed. No issues like you were showing in your video.
We are in the middle of a complete interior tear out of a family vacation home and are planning again to use PEX A and a "smart" recirculation system for the HW that uses sensors to start the pump.
I have overseen the production of 1500 homes that have had PEX A installed in them and the only warranty issues we have are with screws in the pipes or a pipe that was cut. When the houses are plumbed, they remain under test with water lines under pressure and drain lines filled to the top of the vents. We first switched from copper in 1993 when it started getting stolen out of our homes. We then switched to CPVC which was a nightmare. CPVC freezes easily, it fractures easily, and the glued joints fail too often. In 1995 we switched to Wirsbo PEX A and have not looked back. We no longer use manifolds and it's plumbed in a traditional way. No complaints or lawsuits from homeowners. The only complaints we get about plumbing are the low flow fixtures, particularly shower heads. Also get complaints about how long it takes to get HW to the faucets. They do not recommend recirculation systems for tankless or heat pump water heaters unless you have a "smart re-circulation system" which we do offer as an option.
I will tell our warranty team to keep a lookout for the problems you described.
Thanks for the information.
I repiped my plumbing to far end of the house after copper line leaked under the slab this was around 2005 with PEX. I still have some of that stuff not even PEX A or B just says PEX. Never had any leaking and I also run a hot water recirculating pump. I used the cheap watts pump and a GE smart outlet with a motion sensor I have on the wall in 2 bedrooms. I program the smart outlet to run for 30 minutes when it detects motion. Then it is off for 30 minutes. Most of the night and day when we are at work it's not running.
PEX = ticking time bomb inside the walls just like Quest. I am buying a new house. As soon as I move in, I will be replacing EVERYTHING with copper.
@@darknes7800
Copper wears out in time. Ticking time bomb.
@@deezynar Poor PEX loyalist...........houses 60-70 years old plumbed with copper, doing just fine. PEX = houses just 1-2 years old, FULL of leaks and failed piping.......tick tick tick......
@@deezynar Where are the multiple class action lawsuits and settlements from the COPPER pipe manufacturers??? crickets.........crickets..........crickets.........LOL!
A very curious condition of the expansion rings at the 7:00 minute mark. The opinion stated is the pipe is being attacked from within and causing the pipe to turn from white to yellow. How could that be true when the expansion rings, which are NOT in contact with the fluid inside the pipe, be just as uniformly yellowed as the pipe???? That section sure looks like it was yellowed from something external instead of the internal fluid. Age, heat, UV, caustic or acidic air environment, perhaps???
Because it is from the inside and continues to work its way to the outer while traveling through it has an affect on the connections. If it breaks down the interior then it will makes its way to the connection
All it has to do is drip onto it.
OK - this is why the Uponor PEX is failing. As part of the manufacturing process of the white PEX tube is skinned with a red outer cover. In order to make the red and white bond, the tube is run through a heat tube that fuses the two parts together. This heat process causes the plastic to continue to cross link on a molecular level. The increased cross linking causes the material to become brittle. That is why you will see stress fractures in the location that the assembly tube expands the pipe to fit over the fitting. you will see linear micro cracking at the transition of the pipe/fitting joint just beyond the white ring - in the area that the tube necks down to normal size. I speak from direct experience.
We had a brand new custom home built in 2013 and the Uponor PEX product was used. Blue for cold and red for hot. You will only have the problem with the red. This is due to the continuation of the cross linking of the plastic due to the hot water in the pipe. In the end, the entire hot water system pipe runs had to be removed from the walls, ceiling. All this in a two story home. A real disaster. All that expensive wall texture
Except it also affects the white pipe.
Except that Uponor white also has leaks and cracks... I think your red is more likely to leak than blue because heat exacerbates the premature aging of the pipe, but examples of failed white Uponor are on the web.
I have white pex A that leaked mid pipe. We have chloromine in our water here. And if you watched the pex B video, it's extruded differently. He uses the Pex A fittings and collars for the increased flow over the Pex B fittings restriction from trying to not use expansion in the installation. The B pipe can handle expansion as well as A pipe can.
This material gets used a lot in multi-family or even commercial projects looking to tighten their budget. How long would you say until systems operating under higher temperatures (110-180) will last? I will gladly do my best to talk customers out of using PEX.
@@d1ffuse900 I have an older Schultz mobile home with grey pipe, no problem, it 1992.
I have been using uponor for at least 20 years live in western Pennsylvania. And have found that the splitting seems to occur mostly if the pipe is very cold and it’s expanded. May seem like a coincidence or not but I have had zero leaks from any install that I’m aware of. Thanks for your insight.
Hi plumber brother, another thing that kills pex pipe is sunlight. I lived in florida for 4 years, a couple of my coworkers told me was that a lot of developers bought truck loads of pex straight from uponor and left it all outside as houses and condos were being built. Some pipe sat outside in the sun for a year, I did a few service calls for leaks on pex a. Even the homeowner in a development told me the same thing about having pipe left outside and trying to sue due to leaks, but was to hard to prove.
@@geneticdisorder1900 yes that is another contributing factor. And poly gas tubing has the same issue in fact in western pa our gas companies won’t allow pipe any older than 3 years to be installed and its code that it has to be stored inside or out of direct sunlight. So it’s looking like it’s not defective materials as much as the environmental elements are impacting the integrity!
@Genetic Disorder: Good point. All distributors and users should know that PEX is not intended to be stored outdoors, and that even when stored indoors, PEX should be kept in the original packaging prior to installation for protection against UV/sunlight and other potential hazards. PEX pipe is not to be stored for extended period of time and should be installed within 30 days of exposure to UV light. If subjected to UV exposure for more that 30 days, such PEX material should be discarded and replaced with fresh pipe.
Most Uponor failures are not at the expansion, but literally anywhere on the pipe. Still, making sure the pipe is at least at room temperature before expansion is smart.
I appreciate the simplicity and thoroughness of your presentation. I'm always on the lookout for good plumbing information.
This is eye opening, we have been repairing and repiping Uponor pipe for years. I have been in contacted with Uponor trying to get confirmation on what is causing this deterioration in the pipe. However I have been given multiple answers, like high water pressure, high water temperature, and high pressure with high water temperature. We have always use Nibco B pex and have never have to go back and repair or replace pipe. We been in business for almost 20 years and give our customers 10 year full warranty on repipe.
I am glad I first bought the PEX B crimper when I started using PEX, forcing me to use all PEX B. So far, I have not heard of the B having any bad leaking problems. I assume at least some of A's problems comes from the pipe being stretched out for the joint fitting, whereas the B seals with a crimped ring without stretching the pipe.
Same here so far so good for me as well .
I use clamps, (but would have no problem with crimps) and got a ton of crap for it and not using uponor. Zero failures. IMO, pex B is a better product.
WOW - am I reeeeeeally glad I've been using Pex B whenever Pex was requested by the customer - this is gonna bring back memories of the Quest fittings failure and lawsuits !!
I'm still a believer in copper pipes. I just did a remodel on a 100 year old building. The copper pipes were installed in the early 50s. It was still functioning. The only reason we changed it was to go to bigger supply lines.
Your crazy! The only way copper is worth a shit is if the PH of the water is over 7. Any water with a PH of lower than 7 will have pinholes in copper in just a few years. FACTS!
@bryantaylor4139 there is more to plumbing than repiping houses. Copper is more versatile because it can handle more pressure and vacuum and it can brazed. Copper isn't the best in every situation but neither is pex.
Copper is awesome no debate but way too expensive nowadays. If it were me I'd love copper with propress fittings but talk about pricey!
Same man. Type L copper all the way. Worth every penny if you want the longest lasting option on the market and can afford it.
Thank you for putting out this video. I was considering switching to pex A for remodels. Somehow, RUclips randomly pulled up your video. I don't know if pex A has different brands that may not have a problem, but I will stick with pex B. I have found only one failure with pex B, and that was where someone used a plastic pex fitting with a stainless crimp ring. It completely came off pipe. I appeared to be crimped too close to the end of the pipe and not centered on fitting barbs. I prefer brass fittings and copper crimp rings. The only issue is that sometimes the crimp tool is hard to get into tight spots. I would like to see your preferred fittings and tools. Thanks again.
This is a known issue because of the way that they colored the pipe. All uponor pipe being sold now is without color. This video is just click bait and fear mongering at it's finest.
I’ve been using this 13 years in maine. I have cut into some of the pipe that has highly acidic water after about ten years to do various repairs. Although it becomes harder to expand at ten years after installation it’s still expanding and then contracting and have had zero leaks. I cannot say the same for copper or any other pipe. The water here eats everything but then pex a holds up the best.
I would have to say i have never had an issue with wirsbo/uponor pex in 20 plus years. I did leave a piece of one inch aquapex outside for maybe a week in the weather . [Summer time] . When i expanded it the pex looked like safety glass that had shattered. Didn't leak but i replaced as a precautionary. I have always said dont let anyone install pex that is sitting in the bed of their pick up. I would also like to see a lab analysis of the water quality where these pex problems occurred.
When I built my home 33 years ago I installed Wirsbo in the slab except for one loop I used Stadler PEX C. I was so unsure of this new plastic pipe that I did the radiant on the second floor with copper. Since then I have used PEX A in the snowmelt system on the porch and steps, the dog kennel and a 2400 sf shop. I have never had a leak or any type of failure. I have seen PEX that I left outside uncovered for a few years and it snaps like stale pretzel sticks. I use Uponor exclusively for heating systems as the fittings maintain the ID of the tubing and have less pressure drop. I don't really use it for plumbing as I prefer copper. We have one area here that uses chloramine to sterilize water. That water destroys water softner resin in 10 years and turns anything plastic or rubber into junk.
I am not familiar with oxygen barrier Wirsbow made prior to 1993. I got 2 Uponor Pex A pipe leaks for Christmas. Both where repiped homes 7 years ago.
@@IntegrityRepipeInc Here is a short upload of my system, you can see the early Wirsbo manifolds and the PEX C. Stadler was using the electron beam crosslinking at that time. Tried to get a date code off the pipe but it is not legible. It seems the A PEX is having trouble with chlorine, this home has a well so that is no concern but the system id filled with a 30% glycol mixture for over thirty years and that seems to have no effect. Unfortunately the imperfections found in the Zurn piping make it unsuitable for radiant heating systems as repair fittings under slab are unacceptable. ruclips.net/video/CzMDt2YoaSI/видео.html
Do you have well water or city / chloramine ?
@@mrwdpkr5851 Well water
Thank you for the information.
I’m in south west PA myself. We use a lot of HePex and some AquaPex. We’ve never had any issues with HePex we’ve put in heating system and only once have we had an issue with AquaPex. The location we had the issue with AquaPex was in a municipality that has such high amounts of chlorine in the water that you can smell it gassing out if you put water in a pan and sit it on a counter.
Thank you for the information and great video. I was dead set on Uponor pex a expansion. Just received my Milwaukee expansion tool as well. I'm going through your videos now for maybe another option.
pex-a is fine, consider a different brand if you’re concerned.
I own a plumbing company in Toronto. We service high rise condos throughout the city. We have been running into issue quite often on domestic hot water risers. Pin holes and splits. Just terrible!
Any heat such as hot water will reduce the memory effect of Pex A. How long before a leak? Who knows. Guess 10 years normally but under hot water, maybe as little as 5 years
You're right... it's just your opinion. But it isn't as simple as you claim and PEX B is not immune to problems caused by chlorine as the antioxidants added to the PEX (either type ) are sacrificial and ALL PEX is subject to this degradation. Has nothing to do with "undulations" or any other physical characteristic. It's chemistry but only in severe cases will PEX fail in short order. Don't plumb your pool with it.
Undulations? That's just nonsense. The manufacturing process of PEX B uses silane chemistry the antioxidant are not exposed to free radical during manufacturing... but PEX A chemistry (using peroxides) is easily compensated by starting with more antioxidants. Even if you think silane chemistry results in more oxidation resistance, that is still chemical composition and not a physical property.
Agree with you 100%. You're obviously knowledgeable in the industry. Nice to see someone who can separate the accurate from the ill-informed. No fault to anyone, I think we're all here trying our best to understand the same thing.
15 years ago I said that stretching pex wasn't a good idea. I'm so glad I Have Never used overpriced uponor garbage.
I'll stick to pex b and my ss camps. 15 years and Not 1 failure....
Thank you for the information! I just bought a a Milwaukee expansion tool this year, but have yet to use it on a job (I am returning it asap). Does this happen on white Pex A? I can't believe this is happening? After the polybutelyne pipe disaster we have this. The amount of waste generated from repiping is crazy.
I built my house in 1992. There is around 3500 feet of Wirsbo hePex in my radiant floor heat of my basement shops and living room. This pipe was colorless translucent with smooth interiors. It looks and is as good as when I installed it. The fittings were brass threaded compression type with internal ferrules. Now, this, of course, does not get a lot of water changes in a closed loop heating service and the iron from the Hypertherm boiler does color the water grey. Now, for domestic water inside, I only use copper with lead free solder. The same goes for my heating headers and water/air heat exchangers.
If I build another building, I would use the same product specifications and construction practices.
I wouldn’t use copper, I’d use pex A or B and install a flow-tech anti-scale system or a whole home filtration system and u should be good according to what he’s saying about the carcinogenic’s causing the pipe to crack
The local water here is very hard, so it eats copper pipe from the inside out. The copper pipe in my house was eaten up just as bad that pex.
I installed pex A with a water filtration and softener system. If the water is full of chemicals that destroy piping, it seems like removing the chemicals is the better than trying to find a magical pipe that won’t be damaged by all types of impure water.
I have been running a caustic soap liquid (pH>13) for 4 years in clear Pex A pipe (don't know the brand...yet). The chemical will break down the brass fittings in a few years but there has been ZERO attack on the white Pex A 1/2" pipe.
You made several references to Breakpoint Chlorination but no clarifications as to what it is or how it is a problem. Is this a process being used prior to delivery or in the building where the problem is being seen ?
About 10 or so years ago the municipal water authorities switched from Chlorine to Chlor-amine (sp) for water purification. Breakpoint apparently is a provider of Chlor-amine. He did very briefly state this in his video.
@@69dblcab That's nuts. Chloramine is a terrible disinfectant. The only advantage it has over free chlorine is that it's very stable and doesn't degrade nearly as much as free chlorine in sunlight. Other than that, it's essentially worthless.
@@69dblcab As one who has been involved in pool water for about 60 years, I have to say that this reference to Chloramine makes no sense. Free Chlorine is a disinfectant that easily"decays" into chloramide. When this occurs, the water obtains the typical smell and it becomes totally useless for sanitation.
Omg we just had a carbon copy of a leak in our house from an uponor PEX pipe. Contacting our insurance and class action lawyers, thank you so much for this video.
I’ve never used it, since it came out I didn’t like it. Glad I’ve never installed any of this junk. Thank you for sharing this, I’ll be showing this to my customers and contractors that ask me for it.
Pex B doesn’t have that problem . Nothing is perfect bro.
@@jennitsu12 nope! B and copper crack or pin hole with copper and some have issues with A i guess. shit happens.
Hi Joe - what city did the yellowed PEX come from? I have properties in Orange, Anaheim and Villa Park that had PEX-A installed in 2000-2010 and none are showing that yellowing. I wonder if what you're seeing is related to specific water conditions.
I do appreciate your taking the time to address the cheap pex issues.
Thank you so much for this explanation ! And No, we do not just have to accept it ! It appears it is faulty ! That 50% of new housing is using this stuff is scary when purchasing another house and not knowing if you will have to repipe !
wow, didn't know about this massive issues thank you Joe, super helpfull
Interesting... Have been working with Upononr PEX-a pipe for over 20 years with no issues. I frequently attach new PEX into existing old PEX pipe so I can see what condition the old PEX is. Never noticed such interior damage as described here. Must be something happening locally, in your region of operation. Uponor discontinued red coated and blue coated pipes couple of years ago, and replaced them with clear pipe with red or blue print. Over 50% of new homes in US are built with PEX pipe, and PEX is choice of materials in my area as well. As far as Class Action Law Suit goes - well, there always be such law suits floating around. In 2021, City of Falsom, CA, filed class action law suit on behalf of 2,000 new homeowners because of pin hole leaks in new copper pipes. Similar Class Action law suit was filed in the well publicized Los Rivero case, filed in 2022 in So.California. Reason, leaking copper pipes. And we don't even wanna start with galvanized pipe and its century old problems. So leaks happen in all available materials - not only PEX. .PEX is a new kid on the block. We just have to accept it. Thank you
I agree I have been using upon for long time and no problems, I am from Orange County CA may be water most clean here!!
Full red AquaPEX is available. I had one of them tell me blue will be available as soon as they find a reliable supplier for the coloring.
If you fully insert and open it can tear
I’m in central Florida and I’ve never seen the inside of pex look like that. I’ve cut pex out on houses with water softener, plain tap, wells, chlorinators, and UV .. 1yr old, 5, 10, etc..
in my area CPVC is king. But I believe he has the best intentions but I feel that it’s Misleading. No plumbing products on the market have never been subject to a case action. NONE. They all have pros and cons.
No, we don't have to 'just accept it'. There would be no progress if we 'just accepted' something that we could otherwise improve.
We have a house that was built in the 2005-2006 time frame with Wirsbo AquaPEX-A white translucent pipe. About 4 years ago, one of the pipes developed a very small crack and started spraying water inside the wall. We had that fixed. Then a year later, another crack / water leak. Then another, and another. We sent about 6 or 8 defective pipes to Uponor and they claim that none of the cracking in the pipes was their responsibility. This has caused so much damage in our house that we've had the house re-piped in the last month (Nov. 2022). With the re-piping, repairs to the walls, texturing, painting, etc. it's cost us over $ 50,000. Most of the Wirsbo piping looks ok, but their are sections where the pipe is discolored and the printing on the pipe is severely faded. All the cracks / leaks have occurred in the sections of the pipe where discoloration occurred.
P.S. A neighbor a few door away, has the same Wirsbo AquaPEX pipe too with same cracking / water leaks. They too have had their house re-piped recently.
It is to bad that you did not call me. You have to prove/ provide evidence to prove your case. Now that the evidence is removed you can no longer prove your case.That being said if you have another neighbor that has a problem call me first. I can teach you how to collect the evidence and have their insurance adjuster call me. What city are you in please. The public likes to believe that it only happens in my area and not in theirs.
Hey Keith, I am going through the warranty process right now with Uponor but they are taking forever and we are at one week a leak now which is really bad. This is obvious that this is a defective pipe issue so it would see that Uponor should cover this. This worries me that you said they would not cover this for you. You had to pay the full $50,000 out of pocket? Did insurance help any?
hi when you re-piped. which one do you use? the copper of pex B again ?
How big is this home square foot 50k seems very high I would have went with type L copper it’s a proven product with a water treatment system
@@brian2100 I had pinholes in my copper all over the house as the water company delivered a lot of air with the water….
Thanks for sharing this info Joe. I'm about to start construction on a new large home for a client. He prefers that I use copper. Cost is not an issue, but everyone is telling me to use Pex. And it would be much easier - especially since this is rammed earth construction (24" solid exterior and 14" solid interior walls) and running pipe either in the ceiling and down a larger PVC tube in the walls or PVC pipe with Pex fed thru those larger pipes. Copper would be much more difficult, obviously.
I have a feeling that this piping was exposed to excessive UV and degraded.
People forget that PEX is not to be stored in sunlight or exposed continuously.
Thank you Joe, you helped me make the decision to stick with my first decision of using Zurn Pex B, I almost went to Uponor Pex A, because of the flexibility alone. I've been searching online to find more information and came across your video. You very well may have saved me thousands of dollars and a huge headache in the future! Thanks again!
You're thanking him for misleading you?
It isn't as simple as he claims and PEX B is not immune to problems caused by chlorine as the antioxidants added to the PEX (either type ) are sacrificial and ALL PEX is subject to this degradation. Has nothing to do with "undulations" or any other physical characteristic. It's chemistry but only in severe cases will PEX fail in short order. Don't plumb your pool with it.
Undulations? That's just nonsense. The manufacturing process of PEX B uses silane chemistry the antioxidant are not exposed to free radical during manufacturing... but PEX A chemistry (using peroxides) is easily compensated by starting with more antioxidants. Even if you think silane chemistry results in more oxidation resistance, that is still chemical composition and not a physical property.
Then micro-crack problem resulted from the process of getting the colored coatings to bond and that, as stated, decreased the resistance to oxidation. decreased... not eliminated.
I got into the trade In ‘95 doing copper. Got “forced” to switch to B in ‘08. Did some A in ‘18, was almost convinced it was better, but my area (small town) suppliers don’t carry A, only B. Still doing B with brass fittings and copper smash rings. Personal use I would use L copper, if I was building my dream house I’d use hard K copper. Under slab I sleeve B. Which there has been a lot of slab houses in the last 5 years.
Always a pleasure to hear the master.
I built my home in 2003. All upinor domestic water and total infloor heat. I have replaced at least 12 brass fittings due to failure. I do have somewhat acidic domestic well water that i now treat. At the time i thought the brass fittings would be better than the plastic fittings but i have changed my mind. I do not have all home runs and am waiting for the few brass fittings in the concealed structure to fail. Master plumber with 49 years in the trade until retirement 2 years ago. The good news is that all of the failed fittings were exposed and easily replaced. I would advise to use as many poly fittings as possible.
Yup, it's called "dezinctification"
I wonder if grounding them would help?
I have Uponar AquaPEX used in my home when it was RePiped in 2019. Since then I have had both leaks described in this video, 1st one was right at a joint ring, so small that it took the plumber a week to locate, and repair. 1:27
the next leak was 6 months later, same stretch of pipe but this time 6” from the repaired joint. Both leaks were tiny tiny streams of water, my FLO leak detector my insurance company forced me to install indicated that less than 1 gallon a day was leaking and was probably a leaky facet or toilet. The leak detector is currently showing a small leak, which I cannot locate. The previous leaks ended up dripping through the ceiling drywall, this new leak I assume will do the same soon.
Was this piping for a pool? Otherwise why was breakpoint chlorination applied through these pipes?
Some municipal water sources "sanitize" the output water from the treatment plant through to the consumer wide with chloramine to presumably reduce coliform and other biological contamination. The problem is that chloramine is a terrible disinfectant. But it's more stable than free chlorine, which makes it cheaper. I'm not sure why this guy is using the term "breakpoint chlorination" (it's most properly used in the use of "shock" chlorination where large concentrations of free chlorine are added to water to drive out the chloramines.
All municipalities add disinfectant to their water. The disinfectant of choice 90% of the time will be chlorine or chloramine (chlorine+ammonia). Chloramine is more stable. Water will have a chlorine demand caused by contaminants and chemistry and that demand must be met in order to have free chlorine available to maintain a residual to protect the water from biological contamination. The point at which this demand is met is its breakpoint. Excess chlorine is available to cause oxidation of many things, mainly using organic material such as plastic. This includes RO filters you may have under your sink. Those always have activated carbon prefilters to remove the chlorine. Not only does your water taste better, it protects the RO membrane, which is highly sensitive to chlorine. What color will plastic turn when oxidized by chlorine? First yellow. Then black. I think he is on to something here. Your mileage will vary depending on your municipality’s chlorine/chloramine dosage and the chlorine demand in your water. That’s why there are plenty of examples of success and mounting examples of failure.
Can you use the same fittings in PeX B as you do the A? I’ve not tried it so just wondering
Check the print on the pipe. They will list a bunch of ASTM standards that tell which fittings they are approved for. But in general, PEX-a and b can use all the fitting systems with the following caveat: only a few PEX-b products can use the expansion fittings (like the Zurn expandable PEX-b). When in doubt, check the ASTM list on the pipe print. If you see "F1960", that's expansion. F2159 and F1807 are the poly and brass fittings that can be used with copper crimp or stainless steel press sleeves. ASME 1061 is the Push-to-Connect like SharkBite, but not all PEX wants to play with that system. Check the print on the pipe.
Please explain, Uponor pex-a has been in used in Europe since the 1980's and most of europe uses chlorine in their water.
It looks like UV exposure to me.
I am a master plumber with 28 years of experience.I have been using uponor for around 15 years with zero problems or issues.The only thing i can think of is improper storag before installation.
Wait how long has pex A been available? I thought pex A was a fairly new product in the market?
I got 2 Uponor Pex A failures for Christmas and I just got a call right now of a third!
I have had the brass fittings fail in 15 years, I have never seen a pipe failure.
@@IntegrityRepipeInc Chlorinated water I presume? Any failures on Well water?
Also, the caking looks a lot like calcium carbonate precipitation which occurs a lot on surfaces that are subjected to heat and hard water.
Interesting. I purchased my house about 7 years ago. When it was repipled, I had it redone with Upenor-A (if I recall correctly). It was done with all white, and a home-run configuration. I will have to check all my connections next time I am in the crawl space. Got it will be a pain to redo if needed.
What does "the last of the red" mean? Does uponor no longer make red pipe? I have a roll of 3/4 red in my storage. Is it worth more money now
I think that this problem is more an indication of the almost universal carcinogenic “drinking” water across the US of A, not even a third world country in this respect. Flint water is everywhere and if it eats your pipe, just think of what it does to your body. In Europe which in some places has preserved ancient Roman standards of clean drinking water as the most important public health measure, that problem does not exist.
The Flint, MI water was acidic because of the incompetence of the water utility not treating the new water source with corrosion inhibitors. The low pH water attacked the lead pipes, causing lead to leach into the water. If Flint had treated the water with corrosion inhibitors (phosphates), there would have been no issues. The problem was the pipes, which are lead from being built a long time ago where lead was common practice for water distribution - as long as it's treated. Chicago is one of the largest consumers of phosphates for drinking water treatment.
Copper piping is also very harmful under acidic water conditions, as it will also leach into the water. Copper poisoning can cause liver failure and death
@@TierNone_LarperatoR I've had an RO unit in my house for drinking water for at least 20 years. Tastes better than bottled water and RO units are a lot less expensive to buy (and filter replacement too) than it used to be with many competitors out there. Also good to have a remineralizer cartridge on the output of the unit or holding tank for taste.
You do know that the Romans used lead pipes
@@josephpimentel4624 I was about go say that
Been doing pex as a certified installer this is interesting but we have been doing pex full on since 97 and have never seen this
Is this specific to color of Uponor? Is this specific to certain geographic areas’ w elevated chlorine? Are there any variables applied to the pipes that are failing that are unique? I apologize if my question is answered already. Erik
I ve ran miles and miles of copper had a hard time not running straight a particular pipe with nice and shinny joints from properly cleaning flux off the outside of the pipe....nice Ridgid bracing
Took me alot of struggle to make loops bend pipe over to nearest stud to snail....trying to teach guys how to drill straight holes or run waste and vents straight....but I uncover way more failure of copper pin holes electrolytes pipe now....and have only uncovered Uponor failure on yes red pipe near hot water tankless unit that temp setting had been over righted and from looks of somebody used a torch and cooked it probably trying to hurry up the pipe memory....1 time! So what ever they are putting in your water or not condition the water I would say DONT WORRY so much about the pipe instead everyone's HEALTH!
So where those ones that where yellowed on the outside exposed to uv somehow?
I have pex b about 10 yrs old that was installed using cinch rings. No pipe failures but one ring failed at the water heater. The failed ring was the code distance from the heater and was attaching the pex to npt threaded fittings. However a galv nipple was use so the may be galvanic corrosion. This was a repipe from copper that was pin-holing everywhere including over the electric service panel.
I just re-routed a section of Uponor PEX that I installed 7 years ago and the inside and outside look as good as the day I installed it. I'd be interested in a more scientific look at what is going on, rather than this approach where we have no idea if the PEX was installed properly, stored properly (not exposed to excessive UV light), water conditions, etc.. The video is alarmist, without offering much in the way of evidence, other than some cut open PEX that is repeatedly held up to the camera for 10 minutes. As for the lawsuit, we live in a litigious society.
I had just about decided that I needed to "remodel" some of my copper plumbing. I thought I might as well get some Pex "A" and use that. I live in the country, no chlorine or chemicals in the water. SO would "A" Pex or any upinor have any chance of failure in well water plumbing?
I'm not questioning your conclusions but the Uponor pipe I installed in our cottage when I replumbed it back in 11 years ago is still white and hasn't leaked a drop and I have well water with a high concentration of iron. I'd agree the the pipes you sectioned have been attacked/damaged but by what? What was in these systems where this pipe was used that caused this? Any pipe, whether PVC, copper, brass, PEX can be damaged if it's being subjected to some sort of chemical that it was not intended to be used with.
I believe you said this was due to chlorine in the water. I'm here in Florida and we are inundated with chlorine in the water because the water is so bad. If this holds true, then what better place to test this project. I do home repair and remodeling and was looking into changing from CPVC AND COPPER. Now I'm having second thoughts. I'm still old school. so I'm a copper man myself. Tried and true over many years. Copper isn't perfect, but it lasts longer a whole lot longer than 7 years. Thanks for the great info and the effort to letting us know. I'll keep an eye out as well as an ear for anything pertaining to this. Thanks again.
I repipe homes that are 6 years old all the time. they are copper failures. Copper is not copper any more. Copper made in the USA has recycled copper in it that is hot washed from China. I am not a fan anymore and I purchase copper 6 days a week since 1990.
@@IntegrityRepipeInc Sounds good. I'll take your word. This country is so far gone and we don't manufacture products like we used too. So I'm going to go with your recommendation by using Zurn Pex B. Now I have a reason to buy the spreader tool also. Thank you very much for the info.
If you have any concerns about chlorine in your public water supply, then two things you should consider: (1) order yourself an inexpensive test kit and confirm just how much chlorine is in your water and (2) possibly consider installing an active charcoal filter at your water supply entry point. Both are likely to be a lot cheaper steps before spending a lot of money on pipe.
If you choose copper, just make sure it is type K or L and not M. The vast majority of copper pipe failure is due to the thinner-walled (and cheaper) type M. But just keep in mind, copper installation is a lot more laborious and expensive than PEX (of any brand). So I would really confirm first if chlorination is really a problem before you make any decision. Be informed. Be wary of stuff you get told on RUclips. Good luck.
@@IntegrityRepipeInc A couple of decades ago, I worked as a claims adjuster for specialty insurance, one was for homes thru their utility company. We authorized so many repipes for entire zones in FL and PA due to the copper pinhole leaks from the water treatment. At first it was repairs, then as we noticed the pattern, the first time a customer called in for a leak, we have servicers go out and inspect for a repipe. Cheaper in the long run.
@@thebluelunarmonkey was it type m or L that was installed ? Were they on well or city ?
Any house on city water has to be type L where I live in New England and that’s due to pressure fluctuation issues. Type m is only rated for 100 psi and we have areas where the standing pressure can be 90psi during the day. Only time I dealt with pin holes was at my brothers house in Maryland, some hack used type m for city water.
I 100% totally agree with you.... I am offering people that have wirsbo pipe in their homes a 2 cubic foot back washing carbon filter that we install before the water softener to take out all
the chlormines and chlorine in the water..... I think that this is a preventitive measure that could extend the life of the plumbing system
So if My water is supplied by my own water well. Then this should not be an issue for my PEX a lines??????????????? Concerned!!!!!
I like the SiouxChief Power Pex, it’s a pex b rated for 1960 expansion with high chlorine resistance.
Uponor pipe is a great product.
Any home with high pressure and or high chloride content is bound to leak at some point
Copper is no different other that the molecular aspects.
Anytype of pex or plastic pipe will always create this occurrence.
If your repiping a house.. always offer a hole home water purification system in addition to repipe.
Not a salt systems as many states outlawed due salt content poluting ground water if its a discharge design.
Chlorine and ammonia (common ingredients to treat water) combination makes chloromine . Detrimental to any system out there even copper.
What you saying is partially true.
The product might be at fault to a degree.. but nothing like quest.
Change the quality of your water when you do a repipe.
That will change the results drastically.
I searched up Zurn Pex B, as he recommended it in the video and comments.
The first video that pops up is him talking about Zurn PEX-B failures.
This is the only guy I’ve seen talking about Uponor PEX-A failures after months of casual researching different PEX applications and brands.
Is he just making these videos for views and ad revenue or what?
I duplex built in 1947 as copper plumbing so it is 75 years old and still good. 30 years from now there will be a big repipe issue replacing all the plastic.
and by then half the plumbers won't know how to solder anymore. be all press fits.
Thank you for this video demonstration and comparison.
There may be more to this. It is stated very very clear never in any instance is pex allowed to see light. Natural, florescent, led, nothing. Paint it, insulate it, whatever but uv will damage it. Is it possible it's from that?
IT IS IN THE WALLS!
Also additional question. Chemically Pex B is the same. Smooth pipe may slow the process due to lower reaction surface area but it is same polyethylene chemically.
The basic polymer is the same, but the crosslinking involved changes things.
@Integrity Repipe inc Chlorine as a desinfection and very aggressive agent was present in drinking water as a standard additive for a long-term before providing some new standards in drinking water preparation.
Agree that PEX-b pipes with silane crosslink additives are more chemically stable than PEX-a ones (especially at high temperatures).
This explains why i am a pex b fan with stainless fittings and why i cut so much of this shit out that's flooding houses. Usually near the fitting but sometimes middle of bloody pipe. Ridiculous for being 6 years old.
The issues seem to be very random, with certain plumbers claiming it's failing everywhere, and other areas where the only failures are due to faulty installation. And most plumbers over 60 claiming nothing is safe except copper.
That's a major plus for being on a well water system.. No added chemicals to mess with the chemistry of the piping!
Is the damage caused by municipalities raising chlorine residuals to 5.0 ppm in most areas?
Hi Joe: My house is on a rainwater collection system and it uses UV light, not any chlorination or bleach. I hope that my pipe will be alright 👍🏽.
Hello there thanks for the information. Have you experienced these issues with radian floor heating? As cloded system sometime with additives in the fluid as well is this a problem.? Anyone answering I am grateful.
Thank you for sharing, I appreciate this demonstration.
Have you seen any of the Apollo or SharkBite PEX-A failing?? Or is this a specific to Uponor branded PEX??
I have. Sharkbite, beyond its hideous cost, needs periodic inspections, meaning you either need inspection panels all over your dang house or to replace fittings very frequently. Either is unacceptable in my opinion. I view SharkBite fittings as simply an emergency backup plan.
Interesting. I just replaced a PEX manifold. One line had deteriorated. I never encountered this before. Tubes were not yellowed inside. Manifold has a "W" logo on it. House was built in 2015. The failed tube has calcium inside and on the outside. It looks like the tubing split. Calcium is on the supply side of the tubing and not at the entry of the manifold into the tubing. Oh, well. I'm grateful I wasn't sweating copper in the crawl space. Thanks.
Why I use Sioux Chief.
What does PEX B and Copper look like inside under similar circumstances with chlorinated water?
Two points.... One of the very first things I learned about PEX around 20 years ago is that it is easily deteriorated by uv light. You definitely do not want to buy pipe that has been left outside very long. Second point... I've installed miles of PEX, never had an issue or call back using brass or copper fittings with stainless steel pinch rings. The only issue I have seen is pinholes in wirsbo PEX wish I had a service call to repair a leak above a drywall ceiling.
Very true. Coiled PEX comes wrapped in clear plastic wrap. Exposure to UV light deteriorates PEX pipe so that clear plastic wrap prevents UV light from hitting the pipe. Plastic wrap should always stay on, until you use up full roll. ( You start pulling out pipe from inner coil outwards ). Also, PEX should not be stored. It should be used right away, not later than 3 months after purchase. If it is older thant 3 months, don't use it. Also, PEX should not be installed where it is exposed to direct light,. I am working with PEX for over 20 years and never had any problem with it, either. Good to know pin holes in PEX may happen, yet, never seen one, yet. Thank you
I have repaired many carbon fiber fittings cracked…
This is very disturbing information. Has there been similar failures to the Uponor Hepex tubing. I'm a plumber who still uses copper on all my domestic water piping, but have installed miles of Hepex in radiant floors. I've used their product since 1991, when it was manufactured in Sweden. I have never witnessed a failure of any kind with the product.
Where these pipes installed in impregnated wood? Why rings are yellow too?
Thanks much for the information. A material failure lawsuit should be the same lawsuit. We call it a joinder because whether it's by the joint or the middle of the pipe, it's still a material failure. I'm only a paralegal, which is sort of like a plumber's apprentice two or three years in, so I'm probably just as confused as you.
What water conditions are causing this chemical burning? Is this an issue on both city and well water? Are there certain things in the water specifically that are causing this? I'm building a new house right now and planning to use Uponor A on a well water setup. Thanks.
Hi superspeeder. I will suggest that you install Zurn Pex B on your new home that is what I installed in my home. Well water may not have chlorine or ammonia you can have it professionally checked.
Uponor is your best option. Just don't use the old red and blue pipe. The clear pipe is fine.
@@TheNismo03 Not True. The new white/Clear pipe is not new at all, it is the old Wirsbo pipe with new label. The White pipe fails all the time. Undulations in the pipe walls allow the chloramines to attach the the pipe walls. You should check the video I did on that subject.
Pex A does not do well with chlorinated public utilities. Untreated well water should be fine. Safer though to go with Pex B.
Well water will most likely not have chlorine. You can get a fairly inexpensive chlorine test kit from various sites on line, including amazon. Also, check if the water filter system you intend to use removes chlorine. Many that use activated carbon will remove chlorine. If that is between your water ingress and all the Uponor, then this is possibly a non-issue.
Thank you, I'm in the planning stages and this is very helpful
Is this only affected by water that is chlorinated? I have well water.
This happens with copper as well. This is due to the dedicated recirculation line (constant water moving 24/7) and chlorine or chloramine in your water. First, cut out and replace the bad section at the elbow. Get your recert line on a timer and get a water filtration system to remove any chlorine or chloramine. For chlorine, you need a Carbon Filter. For Chloramine, you need a Catalytic Carbon filter. I used this system for the chloramine in our water. Removes all the chloramine. Fleck 5600SXT Auto Backwash Catalytic Carbon Filter 1.5 from A Plus Water
This sounds more like the problem, not so much the pipe
I re-routed my plumbing with garden hoses.
The thread makes it easy so you don’t need any clamping/crimping
Basically you just screw everything in together and use drop ears for 90° turns.
That seems to be a water quality issue . The public water company needs to keep a better eye on chemicals used.
Good luck with that. Considering you have to get "permission" from the municipality to sue a municipality. Cheaper to pull all the PEX and install copper.
Crazy. I caused a whole bunch of trouble when I told one of my company's customer about this situation. His is starting to go after 5 years. I will definitely listen to you if I go off on my own. I bet whole house filters would do a lot to mitigate this. And where are all the pureflow fittings hiding? I'm certain that that's going to be the next thing.
What about pex a? What brand should be used?
I’m a new construction plumber. I’ve plumbed thousands of houses since 1990. Went from copper to cpvc in early 2000’s to pex a in 2016. I always shied away from crimp because the tend to bleed over time. I think its due to thermal expansion of the different materials at different rates. I’m an expansion guy and mainly use uponor. But have been using riifo, legend(pert) lately coarse of the in ability to get uponor as they switched to the clear pipe with colored lettering. Have not used zern. They allow expansion on their pipe now. I know expanding pert and pex b in the winter is not feasible because it splits. I’m just an install monkey, all this is confusing cause who the heck do you listen to? Down south they use cpvc, cali uses pex b…they ALL have a failure point of one reason or another. Copper for me at this point isn’t an option i will offer. The copper has a huge pinhole failure rate now, the stuff is stupidly expensive, and frankly I’m just not going to re-tool to get back into it. Maybe switch to zern and expand? Or maybe this uponor failure is area/water municipality specific. Who the hell knows. But i will add, your like the only uponor fail videos out there, this must be a california chlorine thing. Not really seeing it in the Midwest.
I'm in Alabama. I've been installing PEX since 2005 and can't remember the last time I even used a piece of cpvc except occasionally for a repair. Nowadays we pretty much just grab a shark bite couple and transition to PEX. Typical for us is white PVC underground and PEX above ground. No plastic ever left out in the sun.
Holy bejesus, CPVC ?!?!?! Don't admit to using that!!!!! 🤣
Seems like it definitely a chloramine chlorine issue, I've noticed it here as a recently on a few of my projects. Lot of discoloration at the ring and the pipe. Did a job in 2013 had made a repair on a manifold half inch supply on a red hotline. Couldn't figure out why there was a crack a fracture on the actual ring splitting. Yeah it's pretty serious man after all this time basically starting to present itself with the material failure. It's a pretty s***** feeling.
He may be the only one making a video about it, but there is a class action law suit, which means that there are thousands of complaints.
What`s your opinion on Viega Pex pipe using the Manibloc system? Manibloc number for example49813
Pipe number for reference 32923?
any issues with the sharkbite brand that you can buy from Home Depot?
We have these leaks in our home. Our pipes are 7 years old. We have had 9 pinhole leaks in various pipes. All on the hot line. We are replumbing now. Have you seen any evidence of the blue lines breaking? I am concerned that we replace this all and is a few years find the cold line needed to be replaced too.
Damn! As a home inspector I have often wondered when this might happen. Seems every time we invent a thin wall mechanically connected supply line they tend to crack
Bottom line... nothing last forever.
I did a house in poly before the ban used crimp rings 25 years later a new owner bought the house and had me change out the poly to pex when the gutted the house I looked at the work at all the joints and they were fine no leaks no problems other than it was poly
then I did a residential house sprinkler System in Uponor although it had no leaks at the time I do not trust this system you are using Plastic to hold plastic leak proof, do not trust this system use cinch or crimp rings but they even have their own draw backs but over all it works best.
@@jfbeam STAINLESS
@@jfbeam : Forever in a house should be 70 years. I still like quality copper. Who knows what chemicals from the Pex will leech into drinking water piping in 20 years… Copper is pretty inert material.
@@ZAPATTUBE fact
Is this happening with well water too or just with city water?
The biggest problems we have had are the outer clamp rings splitting on both Worsbo and Openor brands , we switched to the copper crimp rings and so far so good .
it would be helpful if the video explained what breakpoint chlorination is.
Never had any trouble and as a commercial contractor dealing in mostly massive multi family the only time i have seen anything like this is from 1. exposure to UV and 2. Exposure to extreme heat or cold and I mean extreme .
So what type of Pex do you recommend now?
Is my new expansion tool worthless now? I can’t find Zurn anywhere. HD sells Apollo here is west Texas. Should I stay away from Apollo? Do I only use white now? Thanks for any help!
Copper. 🤣🤣🤣
Is pex b any doing better? Its smooth right?
Fantastic video! I'm sorry but I just don't trust A. I really don't like B much better. I rather hard pipe with cpvc. It's a little more of a pain due to its rigidity, but I know when it's in there and protected, it's good. It does get brittle over time. With all pipe there are downfalls I suppose. Copper can become weakened from chemicals and minerals. Cpvc gets dry and brittle. Pex A has the faults you described. Pex B has 4,000 crimps which are each potential fail points in time. So I guess we all have to weigh our options and what pipe works best for us depending on location and what our water is like. Great video again!
" I rather hard pipe with cpvc" Seriously? Why do just go all the way back to galvanized? Like CPVC and Butylene, galv was a huge mistake and just a sign of the times when it was used for everything, including venting!
I seems that uponor products aren't sold in my area. I searched the Lowes, Home Depot, Ace Hardware, True Value. Apollo or Sharkbite pipe and fittings are what they have.
Is this an issue only when used on chlorinated municipal systems?
So long story short use Pex B & you should size up to 3/4 to prevent restrictions?Any preference as to crimp or ring style clamps?I personally prefer the crimp.
I would still argue Pex A (current un-colored version) is the way to go. Fittings are all poly plastics, so no need to worry about deterioration from water. Make sure you use pipe wrap insulation and your pex A will last longer than a good 20 years or so. If you're insistent on B, then I would use crimp rings for sure... those cinch rings are a train wreck!