3 plumbing tips you should do in every project 🔧

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  • Опубликовано: 14 июн 2024
  • #shorts 3 plumbing tips you should do in every project:
    1.) copper stub outs with blocking
    2.) coordinate baseboard height with baseboard
    3.) localized shut offs
    #plumbing
    Full video:
    • These plumbing details...
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Комментарии • 440

  • @procrastinator41
    @procrastinator41 Год назад +259

    A-good
    B-good
    C-massive overkill for residential.

    • @blakel4595
      @blakel4595 Год назад +23

      Right? Unless your building a mansion no use for it. Even with our full remodel i had to turn the water off maybe 3 or 4 times for an hour or two, not a big deal.

    • @danieltillman3858
      @danieltillman3858 Год назад +9

      If I'm remodeling, I just throw a sharkbite valve in the room and shut if off there. I agree full manifold is overkill, but I would do that for sure if I could. . To each his own.

    • @greglovelace246
      @greglovelace246 Год назад +5

      I'm going C on this one, I could see a manifold for a big farm system but this is overkill. This is why some plumbers are outrageous in price.

    • @Spookytooth92
      @Spookytooth92 Год назад +1

      C is a nice feature when replacing valves and the such

    • @smallworld1568
      @smallworld1568 Год назад +1

      Doing manifolds and running every line individually is something the OGs used to do with soft/normal copper, nobody wants to pay for it anymore , my company stopped in the late 90s doing manifolds like this

  • @lquinn7212
    @lquinn7212 Год назад +137

    I've got a bathroom remodel tip:
    If you haven't rocked yet, and know where towel rods, hooks and tp holder is going to go, put some wood in there. You'll have something to screw to.

    • @olleydrum9016
      @olleydrum9016 Год назад +4

      Oh nice, I'll do just that since I have a tiny guest that I removed all the sheetrock to already

    • @GageDrums
      @GageDrums Год назад +1

      Good thought but if not the metal drywall anchors that thread in are very strong. I remodeled my parents bathroom 7 years ago and the towel rods are all still rock solid. The old ones were falling out of the wall

    • @charlessalmond7076
      @charlessalmond7076 Год назад +9

      @@GageDrums no anchor will ever be as strong as connecting to deadwood/ blocking in the wall.

    • @charlessalmond7076
      @charlessalmond7076 Год назад +9

      Also block in for a glass shower door if your installing one.

    • @HeadBroski
      @HeadBroski Год назад +1

      I second this. I recently cut open the walls in both of my bathrooms and put up 2x6 blocking where our towel rods go. I wish the builders would have done something so damn simple like that.

  • @magenlin
    @magenlin Год назад +33

    These are plumbing tips you get from a carpenter

    • @stevenleerobinsonjr5774
      @stevenleerobinsonjr5774 7 месяцев назад +3

      Exactly. No mention of the 50% cost increase to run the manifold system. Hell, 80% on a renovation 😂

  • @mistervacation23
    @mistervacation23 2 месяца назад +2

    We are three of the best plumbers that ever Plumbed a Plumb

  • @stevebabiak6997
    @stevebabiak6997 Год назад +47

    On the stub out above the base boards, remember that an escutcheon plate will also be installed to make the hole through the drywall look nicer; so the height above the base boards needs to also account for the size of that escutcheon plate.

    • @norzoloco1
      @norzoloco1 Год назад +1

      Is that what those things are called? I call them pipe collars lol

    • @HenryHD88
      @HenryHD88 Год назад +2

      ​@@norzoloco1 i called them flying saucers now imagine the X files music in the background.

  • @calebreed73
    @calebreed73 Год назад +1

    I’m curious how your manifold works if your hot and cold are all hooked together? Are you using an instant hot water in each room?

  • @MidwestBoom
    @MidwestBoom Год назад +6

    Don't add extra stuff in your house on the hypothetical chance you might remodel in the future it probably won't even be you. Someone wants to remodel 20 years in the future just add a shut off in the basement it'll take all of 20 minutes...

    • @suedenim9208
      @suedenim9208 Год назад

      One school of thought is that if you install a valve when the original plumbing is done it will last until you want it to shut off the water for a repair/remodel down the road, and then you'll get to shut down more of the house and replace the valve while you're doing the project that the valve would have been useful for.

  • @johnknightiii1351
    @johnknightiii1351 Год назад +10

    Manifolds are great but you forgo the benifits of a hot water recirculation loop. I haven't seen a system that uses both yet

    • @johnscott5187
      @johnscott5187 Год назад

      I don't know that you could utilize both, unless you had a pump on each hot water line. Mainly because when it's manifolded like each line has its own shut off where as when it's looped you can just attach to the furthest away and run 1 pump

    • @johnknightiii1351
      @johnknightiii1351 Год назад

      @@johnscott5187 if each line has 2 home runs to the manifold it could work, I've just never seen someone do it

    • @johnscott5187
      @johnscott5187 Год назад

      @@johnknightiii1351 2 home runs? Like a manifold for a recirculation pump? I ran a radiant heat system were the pump pushed the water away from the heat source instead of using it to push it back to the heat source, but it was a zero pressure system so I don't know if it would work as well pressurized. Either way something fun to think about,,
      Edit: after a little thought I think that if you ran a return line from each hot water point of use back to a return manifold then the shortest runs would benefit but I would think the longer ones would suffer just because of path of least resistance. Also you would need quite a bit bigger pump than normal because you are going to be pumping quite a bit more water. Some of those taco pumps only pump like 3 gallons a minute and in a regular 2 bath house you'd be adding hundreds of feet of line. I am by no means a hydronic expert and would love to see one of these doing its thing

    • @johnknightiii1351
      @johnknightiii1351 Год назад

      @@johnscott5187 yeah two home runs, seems like it would be great for high end properties as the extra cost of the pex is negligible compared to the benifits at that point. I would have even paid extra for it on my current house

    • @johnscott5187
      @johnscott5187 Год назад

      @@johnknightiii1351 if all of your piping is accessible in the attic it's not to late to manifold it yourself and set up a pump! I couldn't deal with not having a recirculation line, my house is nothing fancy but it takes forever to get hot without the pump

  • @wilburthomson
    @wilburthomson Год назад +87

    Need more possible leaks, well you’re going to wanna get you a Manifold

    • @realmechanicalengineer5792
      @realmechanicalengineer5792 Год назад

      Pex never leaks if you do it right.

    • @wilburthomson
      @wilburthomson Год назад +16

      @@realmechanicalengineer5792 “Never” a term used to describe a time no human has ever lived through and therefore wouldn’t know. Fact is many elements come into play and adding more unnecessary terminations is one. Also a manifold isn’t Pex haus just connects to it. Seen them leak after years of trouble free service. Wear parts(all valves) DO fail don’t lie to the lion to take advantage of the sheep.

    • @nathanbates9561
      @nathanbates9561 Год назад +7

      @@realmechanicalengineer5792 The one thing that is true of all systems is that everything has an expiration date and that includes Pex.

    • @ShaneHolly
      @ShaneHolly Год назад +1

      Good connections assumed, and all equal. This would not pose a greater threat for leaks.. actually, statistically, it's the opposite. Less branch connections are being made as each area is a home run to the manifold on a pressure regulator.

    • @wilburthomson
      @wilburthomson Год назад +3

      @@ShaneHolly Math wasn’t your thing in school I take it. “Statistically” more connections in any trade is more fail points. No matter what, in a manifold you have at least 2 extra connection points. Also a manifold is not rated the same as pex or some pex fittings for sub freezing temps. Extra cost is also ridiculous. If you add the amount of branch connections up and the amount of manifold connections it would be obvious, well, to some… There are also many extra seals and valves. Good luck out there!

  • @duanehundley
    @duanehundley Год назад +86

    Also run the system in a loop rather than branch so you can have “instant” hot water and also save water.

    • @ChemEDan
      @ChemEDan Год назад +4

      Loop? Fill me in pls

    • @snork_games
      @snork_games Год назад +14

      please elaborate. Is this a 'hot water circulating loop' that uses a 'recirculating pump'?

    • @The_Ladder_Perspective
      @The_Ladder_Perspective Год назад +2

      Can we get a video on this lol

    • @terdferguson1736
      @terdferguson1736 Год назад +18

      @@snork_games I’m guessing that’s what this person thinks they are saying. But doesn’t know.

    • @effervescence5664
      @effervescence5664 Год назад +14

      A hot water re-circulation loop or commonly known as a secondary hot water loop in Europe is pretty common in larger homes/commercial settings. However it does mean you can't have a centralised manifold.

  • @TheBroncoooo
    @TheBroncoooo Год назад +37

    Love the videos, especially as a maintenance tech in the same area as you. I may be maintaining some of these homes. 🤣

  • @woohunter1
    @woohunter1 Год назад +13

    Toilet supply, 8” to the left, 8” up, works for me every time.

    • @magenlin
      @magenlin Год назад +3

      @Jase Bamber bro you complain about amateur hour and act like you're still running Type-B PEX lolol you have no loss with Upunor
      Edit: Also I would like to know where you're bending type b pipe to 90 degrees in a 2x4 wall with out kinking it

    • @woohunter1
      @woohunter1 Год назад

      @@jasebamber7899 psi doesn’t lessen, water volume does, buy hey, it’s a toilet, volume doesn’t matter as much as a sink, shower, bathtub, etc.

    • @woohunter1
      @woohunter1 Год назад +2

      @@jasebamber7899 plumber here, that’s not true…..sort of…. Let me explain, as soon as everything in the house is shut off, but still under pressure, everything is going to be the exact same pressure on the same floor. You will lose 4.3 psi for every 10’ in elevation. So if you have 50psi at the meter in the basement, you will have approximately 45.7 psi on the first floor and 41.7 psi on the second floor if you have 10’ ceilings. Second part of your question regarding elbows and t’s, you will lose some ‘volume’ with long runs of pipe and numerous fittings because of frictional losses. It will depend on what demand the farthest fixture puts on the system. For example, A tub spout fully open will draw a lot more water than a fill valve on a toilet. Hope this helps! The technical terms here and static pressure and dynamic pressure.

    • @woohunter1
      @woohunter1 Год назад

      @Jay no problem, I kinda like to nerd out on some of this stuff, have a good night!

    • @LearnPlumbing
      @LearnPlumbing 8 месяцев назад +1

      8 over and 8 up is what se do. However I'm about to adjust that to 8.5 or 9. Last couple houses my builder went with 6" base material. Had to shave like a 1/4" off the bottom of the escutcheon.

  • @obsoleteprofessor2034
    @obsoleteprofessor2034 Год назад +7

    I like the copper stub out. I have seen so many houses with the shut off all floppy coming thru the sheetrock at all angles.

    • @lucastudor5536
      @lucastudor5536 Год назад +1

      Where do you live? I've never seen that once. I've done like a 100-200 kitchens and bathrooms.

    • @obsoleteprofessor2034
      @obsoleteprofessor2034 Год назад

      @@lucastudor5536 Central Valley Calif. Hit and run and crooked inspectors

    • @suedenim9208
      @suedenim9208 Год назад

      Yeah, but the builder or contractor saved a couple of bucks.

    • @lucastudor5536
      @lucastudor5536 Год назад

      @@obsoleteprofessor2034 yeah I work on the East Coast in Fairfax county Virginia which is notoriously one of the hardest on builders inspection wise. At least residential. It's one of the richest counties in America, which means there's hundreds of inspectors with nothing but time

    • @obsoleteprofessor2034
      @obsoleteprofessor2034 Год назад

      @@lucastudor5536 I've even seen gas flex come thru the wall

  • @tobymacish
    @tobymacish Год назад +19

    Don’t ever put you water line in the baseboard. Talk about screwing the next trade.

    • @terdferguson1736
      @terdferguson1736 Год назад +3

      What ? Why would that screw them? They have to drill a hole ? He’s talking about mopboard not heating baseboard

    • @tobymacish
      @tobymacish Год назад +2

      @@terdferguson1736 have you never changed baseboard after the toilets in? More often then not you have to pull the toilet or had to put baseboard in after the toilets in already.

    • @suedenim9208
      @suedenim9208 Год назад

      @@terdferguson1736 Ever try installing a piece of baseboard with a 3/4" hole over a piece of 1/2" copper with a right angle shutoff soldered to it?

    • @CLove511
      @CLove511 10 месяцев назад +1

      I just did a baseboard install, really isn't that bad. I just put a scarf joint behind the toilet where nobody will ever see it (Plus if you do the joint right, no one sees it anyway).
      The escutcheon plate was right over the top of the baseboard, so I took out a hole saw of the same diameter and pre-cut the hole prior to nailing.
      As much as I wish the plumbers had been considerate back in the 90s, it really was not that big of a deal and ultimately did not look bad.

  • @dan210
    @dan210 25 дней назад +1

    Nice tip 👍👏

  • @hankrhill324
    @hankrhill324 Год назад +1

    Building a manifold in for remodeling in the future… how many times you gonna remodel that house where you’re gonna be shutting off entire zones at a time?

  • @towersroofinginc422
    @towersroofinginc422 10 месяцев назад

    Another great video!

  • @jonbinning9154
    @jonbinning9154 Год назад +2

    As a trim guy I appreciate this

  • @josephcooper4906
    @josephcooper4906 10 месяцев назад

    2nd was a good one 1st and 3rd is complete preference and situational

  • @humboldtglitches9349
    @humboldtglitches9349 Год назад

    Flooring installer here thank you for addressing the baseboard issue in many cases the middle might work but for most flooring installers we just prefer that you put it higher than 4 in off of the ground and remember there's anywhere from 1/8 to 1/4 of an inch added by flooring two and a half an inch to 3/4 of an inch depending on the type of flooring if you know it's going to be hardwood just put it four to five inches above the ground because 3/4 of that is going to be taken up by hardwood floor

  • @madeirafonseca6383
    @madeirafonseca6383 Год назад +1

    Excellent ideas. I only wish the person that plumbed my house had done that.

  • @mauriciorodriguez3974
    @mauriciorodriguez3974 Год назад

    Amazing tips🎉

  • @timdavis1464
    @timdavis1464 Год назад +2

    Excellent tips, thank you for those

  • @admffun509
    @admffun509 11 месяцев назад

    Amazing I love this!

  • @Silmerano
    @Silmerano Год назад

    few years back we got a cheap house and the pipes needed to be replaced. We chose to go with Pex to save money and put in a manifold. Fast forward to about a month ago and I decide to change out my bathroom faucet. The geniuses who owned the home before installed the cabinet in such a way that one of the localized shutoffs was pretty much inaccessible. I was so happy to have shut offs for the bathroom in the manifold and not have to shut the whole house down.

  • @jimpie231
    @jimpie231 Год назад

    The manifold idea sounds good, but I’ve never seen one. I had a 5 1/2 bath home, if you wanted to shut-off the water, you went to the main shut-off for the entire home. Each bathroom had shut-off valves under the sink and toilet, there were none for shower or tub.

  • @rameshpersaud7131
    @rameshpersaud7131 Год назад

    Love the ideas

  • @imjustsaying6656
    @imjustsaying6656 5 месяцев назад

    The manifold is very rare and can be very expensive. The main shut off that every house has usually by the front door or somewhere in front of the house is enough for an emergency shut off.

  • @stephenhume3494
    @stephenhume3494 Год назад +1

    that last cant be used on every job depending how big the house is you dont want excess long run of water depriving the bathrooms etc of water pressure...

  • @stephenwalsh8931
    @stephenwalsh8931 Год назад +1

    Good knowledge. But illegal plumbing at the manifold. You should have longer pieces of pipe in between fittings per manufacture specs. Also, depending on location your water can eat the copper pipe, so go pex all the way.

  • @highendhomeimprovement
    @highendhomeimprovement 10 месяцев назад

    The manifold is great-one note would be that a “loop manifold” ensures a perfect balance of water pressure regardless of which fixture is operating.

  • @johnbodnar3720
    @johnbodnar3720 Год назад

    What plastic stuff you use, what you stay away from, I think copper all the way through the house is better.

  • @ronh9384
    @ronh9384 6 месяцев назад +1

    Put an electrical outlet behind the toilet bowel in case the owner wants to add a heated seat and/or a bidet seat.

  • @mynameIan
    @mynameIan Год назад +56

    Remember to spend all your money on the rough plumbing so you can’t afford to buy the toilet.

    • @Dudjrkfjjffjkffu
      @Dudjrkfjjffjkffu 10 месяцев назад

      Exactly, manifold systems are stupid. Everything else is fair advice

    • @caseyschmidt6532
      @caseyschmidt6532 10 месяцев назад

      To be fair. If your a plumber you can do a manifold in pex for cheap.

    • @mynameIan
      @mynameIan 10 месяцев назад

      @@caseyschmidt6532 you want cheap plumbing and, on top of that, cheap PEX plumbing?!

    • @Dudjrkfjjffjkffu
      @Dudjrkfjjffjkffu 10 месяцев назад

      @@caseyschmidt6532 it’s more so the labor that’s expensive.

    • @caseyschmidt6532
      @caseyschmidt6532 10 месяцев назад

      @@Dudjrkfjjffjkffu absolutely. The pex is cheap especially if you use the crimp ring fittings. I’m buying a new house and I’m going to make a manifold. I’m a plumber so it’ll be quick and easy but I think I’ll use copper so it’ll be a few dollars

  • @codyoverton447
    @codyoverton447 Год назад +1

    Generally put the toilet between 8-9” from the concrete. If you have a huge 10” baseboard in when you’re going to want to lower it, because if you raise it you raise it you risk getting in the way of some toilets. It should be between 6-8” from the center of the toilet phalange also as a rule of thumb. Make sure the measurements will work with the toilet you’re buying

  • @wrdennig
    @wrdennig 4 месяца назад

    I really like the centralized manifold. That'll be great for showers that have no access to the valve.

  • @MichaelM-to4sg
    @MichaelM-to4sg Год назад

    Those manifold setups do not work on hot water if you have a recirculating circuit, which is highly recommended for most applications to conserve water

  • @mikelambert9738
    @mikelambert9738 Год назад +1

    Only if the hot and cold weren't cross connected at the manifold lmfaooo

  • @geremypelleran8487
    @geremypelleran8487 Год назад +7

    Really should’ve done this in Pex-A instead of Pex-B

    • @tacklebox6239
      @tacklebox6239 Год назад

      This guys a hack

    • @terdferguson1736
      @terdferguson1736 Год назад

      @@tacklebox6239 why is that ?

    • @HLBNZ
      @HLBNZ Год назад +1

      Pex B is better for recirculating lines. It holds up much better,but otherwise pex A for everything else.

    • @geremypelleran8487
      @geremypelleran8487 Год назад +2

      Lol 20 bucks these people would use Polybutylene line if they could get away with it and I’m called the hack.

    • @tacklebox6239
      @tacklebox6239 Год назад

      @@geremypelleran8487 20 bucks? That’s what you’re plumber probably makes an hour. Your just a pencil pusher who’s being enlightened while being sold on some upgrades 😂

  • @paulbradbury5792
    @paulbradbury5792 Год назад

    How can you ensure without a doubt that plumbing will NEVER leak behind a wall? Would be nice if home contractors would tell you where you can and can't hang thing for risk of drilling into plumbing or electrical wiring..

  • @GeorgeThePlumber
    @GeorgeThePlumber Год назад

    ❤❤ great advice

  • @samari21x
    @samari21x Год назад +4

    Number 4: Don’t wall over brick.

  • @mitchh6864
    @mitchh6864 Год назад +4

    Never seen a manifold like that but that is a great idea

  • @one8s7n
    @one8s7n Год назад +1

    Oh that manifold... beautiful...

  • @da10mmsocket
    @da10mmsocket Год назад

    Good set up for service techs nice

  • @danrichards496
    @danrichards496 Месяц назад

    I remodeled my basement bath and ran pex and separated Two baths, laundry room, and kitchen. I made a lot of extra work for myself but it’s good to know if a shower valve refuses to turn off or I have to do some work I don’t have to get a motel room.

  • @robc1014
    @robc1014 Год назад

    We just have shut off valves locally to each room in my country. Interesting to put it all in one place; how does the fair for complexity rather than just running a valve inline with normal routing?

  • @zagnit
    @zagnit Год назад +1

    I agree with everything except the manifold; from what I understand they tend to leak over time, and it’s additional connections that’s are unnecessary.

    • @huckbeduck
      @huckbeduck Год назад

      They aren't great for getting quick hot water either. It is nice to be able to turn on a faucet downstream of a faucet that was just ran for hot water and already have hot water to that point. A manifold adds more length to the run. I like the concept of ability to isolate a room for future maintenance, but for the customers daily use and efficiency and water conservation, manifolds aren't so great.

    • @terdferguson1736
      @terdferguson1736 Год назад

      Who tells you guys this stuff lol. Your bad plumber? Look at this guys work it’s pretty damn good . Most likely your plumbers doesn’t come close. This is top 10% work. Sure A manifold with a shitty problem is more joints where his bad work could be exposed on but not for a quality guy. And the person saying it take longer to get hot water off a manifold is insane. It’s all traveling the same distance off a manifold or branched of a line. It’s still all coming from the hot water heater.

    • @huckbeduck
      @huckbeduck Год назад +1

      @@terdferguson1736 Say for instance a kitchen faucet is 20 ft. from the water heater and 15 ft beyond that is the laundry and and a bathroom. Total of 35 ft. right? Now say without a manifold set-up if you ran hot water at the kitchen faucet it would already be 20 ft. closer than it would be otherwise. With a manifold for example, you wash dishes at the kitchen sink then go shower. That water line from the w.h. to the kitchen faucet or dishwasher is purged of cold water and full of hot. Turning on the shower faucet, now you have to purge the volume of an additional 35 ft. to get hot water for a shower, all while dumping the purge water down the drain and putting an additional 35 ft. worth of water volume into the w.h. that has to be heated. Now for instance if you weren't using hot water in the kitchen immediately prior to showering it wouldn't make a difference if it was a manifold set-up or not. At least with a traditional water line installation, some of the time water and energy would be saved. With a manifold you always have to purge whatever distance worth of water from it to the point of use.

  • @czapskibusinessgroup
    @czapskibusinessgroup Год назад

    Loved it all until the manifold. The cost difference for the length of the lines and a manifold as opposed to just putting shutoffs where leaks would be is significant. At the end of the day I'll take my chances and rely on speedy trades over the extra cost to isolate a floor.

  • @whiplash3kilo756
    @whiplash3kilo756 Год назад +9

    Here's something you should consider, do exactly what he says when you have way too money and or build shit on someone else's dime.

  • @mrfu7998
    @mrfu7998 4 месяца назад

    Tip 2 is a seriously overlooked issue … contractors need to make sure this information is provided 😊

  • @fefiforum
    @fefiforum 7 месяцев назад

    1 - back up shut offs

  • @danielsmart7368
    @danielsmart7368 Год назад +1

    Never use the manifold. It sounds like a good thing but it’s not. It makes your hot water take so much longer to get to everything. I put it in and took it out after about a 6 months.

  • @andrewrussell1184
    @andrewrussell1184 Год назад +1

    I just got super lucky yesterday installing baseboards in a bathroom remodel I did. I will not forget to check the height of the toilet water supply line ever again. Getting lucky is not good in my book lol.

  • @court2379
    @court2379 10 месяцев назад

    Recently worked on a house with dedicated lines for each fixture/room and a huge manifold block. It has dozens of leaks points with all the valves and 40 or so lines coming in.
    Guess what. It's leaking at three of the valves. To fix it the entire manifold must be disassembled potentially creating other leaks. My guess is every seal in it will have to be replaced. If you do this system, don't use those premade manifold blocks. Buy the ones that are metal and make sure every component can be replaced without affecting others.

  • @mainbox9847
    @mainbox9847 6 месяцев назад

    manifolds are nice but tend to lengthen delivery time of hot water.

  • @1234GOPRO
    @1234GOPRO Год назад +1

    Future proof and forward thinking design is a must.

  • @jl591
    @jl591 Год назад +3

    Almost nobody will pay the extra money for a manifold system.

    • @CLove511
      @CLove511 10 месяцев назад

      Here's a cool idea, why not run a business making ready-made manifolds plumbers can just toss in and save a bunch of their customer's money?

  • @pauls826
    @pauls826 10 месяцев назад

    Like the idea of the manifold to shut stuff off but leads to lots of pressure and flow loss in the uk if we’re doing a bathroom we just shut the water off for half an hour cut the pipe work and use speedfit or hep blanks or whatever blanks people like to use basically your version of shark bite but plastic

  • @nashwalker7
    @nashwalker7 Год назад

    A- Use a pex drop ear 90. Saves on parts
    B- Yep
    C- Might be overkill but looks sweet.

  • @LearnPlumbing
    @LearnPlumbing 8 месяцев назад

    Did the Plumber stub out hard copper on purpose instead of the pex copper bullets? My plumbers have been having problems with leaky angle stops on the pex copper stubouts. The Tight Zone is small on those stub outs.

  • @stevebrowning1453
    @stevebrowning1453 Год назад

    Very good advice 👏 👍

  • @lispendens
    @lispendens 2 месяца назад

    I usually never localize shutoff and don't see why I should start

  • @Pipeit1234
    @Pipeit1234 7 месяцев назад

    Manifold is a pex thing,way to expensive to sweat in copper. base board info is ok along with wainscot tile so you make sure your supply is right height and your toilet flange is located properly. No 10” rough toilets

  • @DBXCollect
    @DBXCollect 9 месяцев назад

    Everytime I have done a new house with my dad, he would do this. I didn’t bother worrying about it. But thanks for sharing this!

  • @coreyaldridge2800
    @coreyaldridge2800 11 месяцев назад

    Im sure thats PEX pipe but what kind of fittings are those? They look like some type of push joint fittings

  • @thebackwoodsmechanic5029
    @thebackwoodsmechanic5029 Год назад

    Spectacular information for people

  • @alexstoles1339
    @alexstoles1339 Год назад

    What are the blue and yellow fittings called. I know its for pex but what brand and are they crimp, press,push?

  • @augustwest9727
    @augustwest9727 5 месяцев назад

    Heres 3 ways you can increase the cost of your Plumbing when building or renovating.

  • @JOIHIINI
    @JOIHIINI Год назад

    Something tells me the pex to copper is good for resale too lol. Home inspector "well the whole house has copper plumbing" lmao

  • @michaelhuntsalot8312
    @michaelhuntsalot8312 Год назад

    Why is the red and blue mixed? I know there is are Recirculating lines but there are usually by the sink?

  • @zoranbanovic7843
    @zoranbanovic7843 Год назад +9

    As a plumber working in Norway I’m shocked how bad your plumbing standards are in USA

    • @wolfslayer44
      @wolfslayer44 Год назад +3

      What is the main differences? Or is it just everything ( in USA) is sketchy?

    • @daaneel
      @daaneel Год назад +3

      @@wolfslayer44 probably not much difference at all. But of course everything is “better” in europe

    • @MidwestBoom
      @MidwestBoom Год назад

      I love how you don't elaborate at all I've never had a problem with plumbing in over 50 + years

  • @jimmyhadley153
    @jimmyhadley153 Год назад

    As with the water shutoff manifold, pull each room to its own breaker. It's nice being able to shutoff electricity in your immediate work area rather than half the house.

  • @josephus1983
    @josephus1983 Год назад

    Good stuff!

  • @MyAcer20
    @MyAcer20 Год назад

    w8 is that stuff solderd what old tec are they using there

  • @IHateHandleNames
    @IHateHandleNames Год назад

    If you want rigid stub-outs, you can run PEX wing-l's with stainless or galvanized steel nipples coming out of them. If you're really married to copper they make copper stub outs that don't require that brass 90 to be soldered.
    Also, manifolds are great and all. They provide a lot of utility and isolation, but the problem with manifolds is that you have to return every pipe to one area so you end up with significantly more pipe than normal. That's not the end of the world, but it is worth considering. A few key isolation valves in a basement could accomplish a similar thing to a manifold with much less pipe in some situations.

    • @magenlin
      @magenlin Год назад

      Why would you run all pex just to let it rust up in a galvanized nipple at the end. Also they're called drop ear El's and also the manifolds are good in some situations but all the extra pipe needed is going to make most people reconsider right away as it can take 2 to 4 times more pipe and there's better option in most cases if your plumber knows what he's doing. It's especially a bad idea to take ideas from a stranger in the internet building a new house with plenty of money and use those tips like you can save money in your 100 year old fix er upper

  • @Kurogane_666
    @Kurogane_666 Год назад

    I love this video and I'm sad to say the plumbers in Eastern Canada not sure if it's everywhere well not use any copper anymore we have redone our whole house and everything is packed and the water has not tasted the same since it has a muskie flavor smells like rotten eggs at times but only I can smell it think I'm a dog lol but we have a well point as well

  • @ShogunateDaimyo
    @ShogunateDaimyo 8 месяцев назад

    Clean SOV manifold ❤

  • @user-sj8nj3gt8e
    @user-sj8nj3gt8e 7 месяцев назад

    My favourite job is plumbing very interested

  • @michaeljbreault
    @michaeljbreault Год назад

    I don't like the manifold system because it's not compatible with a hot water circulation pump. The hard pipe idea is good. Maybe not necessary under a sink. But the toilet is a good place in my opinion.

  • @joshfriedman9775
    @joshfriedman9775 Год назад

    Love this man

  • @gilbertcox5075
    @gilbertcox5075 Год назад +2

    I always set my toilet water line high this way the baseboards aren't a problem

  • @bryanoberhausen421
    @bryanoberhausen421 Год назад

    That manifold is genius

  • @richarddipaola4935
    @richarddipaola4935 Год назад

    The wall studs are laminated 2/4s. What is the reason for there use. Customer request? The price has to be triple Doug fir.

  • @xcyted4now
    @xcyted4now Год назад

    Why hav hot and cold on the same manifold? The water would mix. I maybe wrong. Can someone explain?

  • @daleflaherty
    @daleflaherty Год назад

    I'm a UK plumber but I insist in installing a entire manifold for new bathrooms but for each appliance hot and cold in bathrooms that have gone for the pipeless design

  • @firemanforever3000
    @firemanforever3000 Год назад

    I put a ball valve in a chase behind a new urinal. The building was built in the 50’s so there were no isolation valves anywhere. The master plumber whined at me for an hour because I put a ball valve in the chase. He installed the new Sloan valve for the urinal and he had a leak at the flush valve. Boom, he could shut the water off and fix the flush valve. He doesn’t eat crow very well.

  • @justinrepast5544
    @justinrepast5544 2 месяца назад

    I like this guys pants, they fit him well

  • @not-a-raccoon
    @not-a-raccoon Год назад

    Solid tips.

  • @FPS-Drew
    @FPS-Drew Год назад +1

    Might look clean, but manifold systems are garbage. No circ system, so you will be waiting for hot water at distant fixtures. Adding unnecessary joints just to make bends and stubing out copper restricts water flow and adds potential for leaks later on.

  • @jamesbjorlie
    @jamesbjorlie Год назад

    Wow! That just makes sense.

  • @andrewrodriguez8492
    @andrewrodriguez8492 6 месяцев назад

    Why are there blue and red pex on the same manifold? I know they're the same thing but why

  • @Frostbbitten
    @Frostbbitten 7 месяцев назад

    Me no likey manifold system, Branch system with hot water return loop....yes please. Near instant hot water at every faucet. Possible future renos is not a good enough reason to run 10 times the pex just to avoid a 10 min service interruption sometime maybe in the future where the water would have to be shut off to cap the line.

  • @mr.villhelm7059
    @mr.villhelm7059 Год назад +1

    So then are you also running instant hot and traditional powered circulation lines through the home to minimize lag time on hot water availability?

    • @Hazardman51
      @Hazardman51 Год назад +1

      Why would you hook up a insta-hot? Those a POU units, typically commercial use. Just run a timed Grundfos or Taco pump on a full loop, vs a cross over loop.

    • @terdferguson1736
      @terdferguson1736 Год назад

      Oh ya a recirculating line on a wall hung ??

  • @bucknut6631
    @bucknut6631 4 месяца назад

    Switch to copper. It gives you a nice solid piece of copper coming out.
    I would have reworded that.

  • @aaronvallejo8220
    @aaronvallejo8220 Год назад

    I am now going to do this next year. Thank you!

  • @howtodoitdude1662
    @howtodoitdude1662 Год назад

    I have a manifold which I haven’t had the need to use in over 20 years. It’s overkill.

  • @arodjr06
    @arodjr06 6 месяцев назад +1

    When they run pex like hard pipe..smh with all those potential leak points....

  • @bojangles_bonjangles8000
    @bojangles_bonjangles8000 Год назад +5

    Smart move going to PEX-B. Less flexible, but far more durable against chlorinated water & leaching. If you are running a recirc line, make sure it's sized to 2ft/sec or make sure it's on demand only.

    • @nickhiller3337
      @nickhiller3337 Год назад +1

      I prefer Pex-A/Pro-Pex but I use Pex-B I once in awhile. Way easier in my opinion.

    • @magenlin
      @magenlin Год назад +2

      That chlorine thing hasn't been true in 30 years. Pex A is better in every way

    • @bojangles_bonjangles8000
      @bojangles_bonjangles8000 Год назад +1

      @@magenlin please explain that chlorine thing…

    • @magenlin
      @magenlin Год назад

      @@bojangles_bonjangles8000When PEX pipe was first introduced from Europe they were not used to the chlorine that Americans put in water here. So it was removed from the market for a time and reformulated and now it can stand up to any water in this country. Better than some copper pipe stand up to some water in this country. What you really need to watch out for is using metal fittings after a water softener

  • @birdologytr3556
    @birdologytr3556 2 месяца назад +1

    If you like waiting for hot water do #3..