DIY Tip Every Homeowner MUST Know // Exterior Water Main Leak

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 9 май 2024
  • This DIY water main leak repair tutorial is all about how to fix an exterior water main leak from start to finish. This house water main pipe repair includes trenching, installing PEX uponor piping, and how to know ahead of time what to use to prevent it from happening again. Bring Your Own Tools (#BYOTools 188) Flume Water Monitor: amzn.to/41vRRXv
    Apparel List:
    -Georgia Boot (20% off with "BYOT"): bit.ly/3MgcVfr
    -BYOT Shirt: bit.ly/36tsgE0
    -Knee Pads: amzn.to/3y2T0X
    Material List:
    -3/4" Pex-A Piping: amzn.to/3Al0fx4
    -3/4" Uponor Sleeves: amzn.to/3LqGMlf
    -3/4" Ball Valve: amzn.to/3n1VhCv
    -Flume Water Monitor: amzn.to/41vRRXv
    Tool List:
    -Uponor Milwakee Tool: amzn.to/3AnAD2I
    -Tape Measure goo.gl/nguoOO
    -Torch amzn.to/2RcK0wH
    -PEX Cutter: amzn.to/3AsElrK
    -Copper Pipe Cutter: amzn.to/3mYmW7j
    Studio, Video & Audio Equipment Setup:
    -Sony A6500 Camera: amzn.to/31ppFbg
    -Sony 35mm Prime Lens: amzn.to/39ZaCJa
    -DJI Mini Drone: amzn.to/3a5WTAq
    -Rode NT-USB Mic: amzn.to/3a4FGHs
    -Rode Video Mic Pro: amzn.to/2Pt5eVh
    -MacBook Pro (w/ Final Cut Pro X): amzn.to/2DNs4nJ
    CHAPTERS:
    0:00 - Intro
    1:06 - Trenching
    4:05 - Installing New Waterline
    13:30 - How To Install Flowe
    MUSIC:
    MUSIC from www.endlessnoise.com/ & www.chernebeats.com
    #byot #diy #howto #polapa #tikihut
  • ХоббиХобби

Комментарии • 74

  • @thegreekguyviva-greece5881
    @thegreekguyviva-greece5881 Год назад +20

    Excellent job. Run a 1.5 inch pvc pipe meter to house so if you ever get a leak or have an issue replacement is a 20 minute job

    • @Badenhawk
      @Badenhawk Год назад

      I'll definitely do that if I have to redo mine, since it's at least 5 ft deep under the frost line.

    • @RAJsWork
      @RAJsWork Год назад

      That is honestly golden advice!! Thank you for that.

    • @jerrychetty2524
      @jerrychetty2524 6 месяцев назад

      Yes you are awesome excellent plumber

  • @user-zh2mj3ff6n
    @user-zh2mj3ff6n 11 месяцев назад +138

    It’s great! My shed has been completed and it turned out nice looking and sturdy and it is way better than the sheds that many of my neighbors had put up. Of course, I'm pleased with the outcome and this Ryan’s ruclips.net/user/postUgkxGZedDTcDfgD7fG_uU4esfx_EgxzlY2_1 Plans was extremely useful to me as a guide.

  • @regularguy9264
    @regularguy9264 Год назад +15

    Nice work. In the future, put the Teflon tape on and then the pipe dope. The tape needs to be tightly fastened to the threaded fitting, but it will slide around if pipe dope is between it and the threads. Pipe dope after makes for extra insurance.
    This video could save a lot of people a LOT of money!

    • @BYOTools
      @BYOTools  Год назад +4

      Thanks so much for the tip and for watching. Truly appreciated and hope this helps people in the future for sure.

    • @regularguy9264
      @regularguy9264 Год назад +1

      @@BYOTools your videos really do seem to come from a sincere place to help people out. Kudos.

  • @DoomDuck1
    @DoomDuck1 Год назад +5

    Under UPC plumbing code the only joints for waterlines are brazed. No mechanical (threaded), push to connect, crimp, solder or expansion. It will work tho in a pinch.
    Also good information on PEX type A. There are also hand expanders which are cheaper. The plastic made for type A will constantly try to return to its original shape; meaning for the rest of the life of the fitting it will always be improving itself.
    In MN, our frost level is 8 feet down so I'm glad yours was only two!

  • @Leo.J.G
    @Leo.J.G Год назад

    I love your videos!!! Keep it up!❤

  • @pattig717
    @pattig717 Год назад

    Great detail , thanks for helping make this a possible job to do.

  • @gmoney9068
    @gmoney9068 6 месяцев назад +1

    Very interesting video. I live in the desert southwest and just had my main water line replaced. It cost me just under $5,000 but, like you said, it's part of being a homeowner. I really like the last segment about the FLUME. I'm going to look into that for sure. Thank you sharing this video!

  • @NavyCopMA1
    @NavyCopMA1 Год назад +5

    I was given a Sense monitor for the power panel after my solar panels were installed and when researching it I saw the Flume system so grabbed that a couple of months later. Probably a year later I had a slow leak from one of my outside bibs and was told within an hour that I had a leak. Walked around and found it within a few minutes and issue solved (loose fitting). One of the best purchases for sure!

    • @BYOTools
      @BYOTools  Год назад +2

      LOVE hearing that Stephen. Thanks so much for sharing and letting me and the BYOT Fam know.

  • @jameswoolfalk6288
    @jameswoolfalk6288 5 месяцев назад +1

    Beautiful job saved that money can go towards your child’s education beautiful

  • @kyusclips
    @kyusclips Год назад +5

    King county and snohomish county are 30 inches below ground. UPC says 18 inches below frost line. King and Snohomish county frost line is 12 inches. Just asked my local inspector. You also could have just installed a 3/4 Fip pex adapter directly on the yoke of the meter. Also highly recommend buring the water service in a layer of sand to protect from rocks even with that insulation. Your original existing "blue pex" for the water service might have actually been blue polybutylene depending on which year your house was built. Polybutylene was used from mid 70s to 1995. Pex piping wasn't approved for water distribution until the mid 90s. Its very unlikely that your original "pex" only lasted "30 years" or whenever your house was built when pex pipe has a life expense of 70 plus years unless it was pre maturity penetrated by rocks. Also check your water pressure. You don't have a pressure reducing valve, a lot of homes in the Seattle are above 80 psi, which is the code limit.

  • @michaelhennessey1530
    @michaelhennessey1530 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you for a good video. I checked the code for Skagit County, and 12" is in the code unless the frost line is lower. Our HOA Maintenance Manager said he recommends 18". I replaced a line 23 years ago with PVC, but I thought Pex might be a better way to go. A great idea about the tracer wire. You are the first place I saw that mentioned.

  • @yongbae9984
    @yongbae9984 4 месяца назад +1

    First video I've watched of yours and just wanted to say I love the way you work! Also, you should sleeve any plumbing penetrating concrete. The micro oscillations from running water will wear down pipe over time against concrete.

  • @coleture3
    @coleture3 10 месяцев назад +1

    Re-piped my whole house with PEX every faucet is now PEX very easy to do. The last one to be done is the main one! just waiting for the day!

    • @LymeandLight
      @LymeandLight 5 месяцев назад

      I actually searched that subject as I need to replace all of my pipes (they are original to the house when plumbing first became available). Any tutorial video suggestions ?

  • @brandonmcmillan8820
    @brandonmcmillan8820 Год назад +11

    Great work! The only thing I would of done differently is adding a sleeve where the pex a goes through the concrete for added protection. I’m getting ready to do this to my house in Burien since my water main is still all galvanized and was wonder how deep it need to be.

    • @BYOTools
      @BYOTools  Год назад +3

      Yep I was thinking about that Brandon but didn't have much room to work with unfortunately. Hoping that layer of silicone acts as a slight protective barrier. Thanks for watching.

    • @YetiFix
      @YetiFix Год назад +2

      I do not know the regulations i USA but in Denmark and probably most EU-nations a pipe going throu a foundation wall need a pipe sleave for two reasons... 1) to protect the water line ex. do to movements between earth and the wall -> will slowly shear the pipe 2) to protect the house from rain water entering the hole around the pipe. Thou you probably will not get problems with the latter do to the driveway below -> rain water will drain down to that driveway and not into the house (we hope)... I know for a fact - from personal experience - that both scenarios are very plausable.

    • @isaiahbucur
      @isaiahbucur 5 месяцев назад

      00⁰

    • @isaiahbucur
      @isaiahbucur 5 месяцев назад

      @@BYOTools qqq

  • @lechatbotte.
    @lechatbotte. Год назад +2

    Pex yes pex no more soldering sweat joints or expensive copper pipe. Pex now had pex pipe that can be buried in the ground good stuff. I saw that toy on a another channel almost two years ago it’s amazing.

    • @BYOTools
      @BYOTools  Год назад +1

      Makes life Soooooooo much easier haha. That tool is expensive but I might have to buy one because its so easy to work with.

  • @NsyShwl
    @NsyShwl Год назад +2

    It's hilarious how you are digging while your baby is pushing the dirt back in 🤣🤣🤣

  • @spoonyfart
    @spoonyfart Год назад +3

    If you weren’t going to remove the galvanized pipe completely from inside the wall and patch with hydraulic cement, you should have left the threaded end on and installed a cap. By cutting flush, you give water a way to seep in.

  • @jonweber5330
    @jonweber5330 9 месяцев назад

    Where's the link to the very detail oriented tutorial on soldering video?

  • @becky-kq2hb
    @becky-kq2hb Год назад

    A huge savings! I’m sure you’re glad that you didn’t have hard rocky soil to dig through.

  • @chrisd7809
    @chrisd7809 Год назад

    4ft is code in NJ plus sleeve going through the foundation.

  • @jjpnw
    @jjpnw Год назад +7

    I understand the copper wrap line for outside, but why did it need to go through the wall as well?

    • @somethingsomethingelse
      @somethingsomethingelse Год назад +6

      You run a pulsing electrical signal thru it and the sensor used picks it up to visualize where pipe is underground

    • @donniegaskill1836
      @donniegaskill1836 Год назад +2

      The wire can also be used as a grounding wire, because most houses are grounded through the waterlines.

    • @funonymous
      @funonymous 6 месяцев назад

      It just needs to be readily accessible ie not buried or something and he couldn’t wedge it thru the same narrow hole the pex tubing went through, so he ran it on its own.

  • @BOHICA_
    @BOHICA_ 11 месяцев назад +1

    No mention about calling 811 for marking utility/electrical lines?

  • @armandomadrigal9793
    @armandomadrigal9793 Год назад +3

    why not a copper to pex adapter on your shut off.

  • @helmanfrow
    @helmanfrow Год назад +2

    Why did you not reuse the existing hole through your foundation?

  • @Sylvan_dB
    @Sylvan_dB Год назад +3

    Seems like underground leaks are expensive. I had one in the crawl space under an addition. I'm on a well, and the first indication was water coming thru the basement wall into the original house. My best bid was $10,000 and the next best was $20,000. I decided I could dig a lot under my crawlspace for $10,000. I found where the polyethylene pipe had been badly scratched in several places during excavation for the addition (before I bought the house) and one of those scrapes had split several inches. A few dollars at home depot and done.

    • @BYOTools
      @BYOTools  Год назад

      Sorry to hear that you had to deal with that issue but great to hear that you where able to take it on yourself and save big $$$

  • @nfn7121
    @nfn7121 Месяц назад

    The foam will make it more challenging to find a leak should you have one at a later date. If a root can break a copper pipe then it sure can break a piece of foam.

  • @djratino
    @djratino Месяц назад

    At least I know now how much it costs for a plumber to do this. I think that I've gotten lucky using an aqua pea. I have a digital water meter. I monitor it daily to make sure the meter is still sitting still when I'm not using water. After a month, I think everything should be good.

  • @ThienNguyen-eg4dh
    @ThienNguyen-eg4dh Год назад +1

    Can you please list all the items needed including the tools?

  • @robertnelson4755
    @robertnelson4755 2 месяца назад

    You didn't need to bring the copper tracer wire INTO the house. They only need to trace UP TO the house, after that it's obvious where the water line is as seen from INSIDE the house. You should have placed a WATER LINE TAPE above the water line to help anyone who digs in the future.

  • @ritamaterne3107
    @ritamaterne3107 11 месяцев назад

    Can you repair the pipe leaking under my manufacture home, please

  • @lordsofgaming2930
    @lordsofgaming2930 Месяц назад

    how do you identify a buried pipe that is not your main? I have well water and I am positive its not on the main well line, but there is a wet field appearing in my backyard

  • @Leo.J.G
    @Leo.J.G Год назад +1

    How much did it cost you to do out of interest?

  • @tampaed24
    @tampaed24 8 месяцев назад

    Is it really " Bad Practice" to address a leaking water line with a compression fitting? There is no way the city I live in will allow a non professional to install a water line. How do you get a permit?

  • @dyau5973
    @dyau5973 Год назад +1

    How did u detect the leak in the first place? Weve had rain every week

    • @chrisd7809
      @chrisd7809 Год назад +1

      High water bill and he says in video the water meter is spinning !!! It only spins when water is running Aka if it’s turned off in the house ( like he said it was) than there’s a leak outside !!!!

  • @weekendhomeprojects
    @weekendhomeprojects Год назад +1

    How many times can you expand an upaloopadoopadeedoo fitting? Unlimited?

    • @BYOTools
      @BYOTools  Год назад +1

      Can't find an exact answer for you on that one but if I do I will let you know. Great questions and keep up the great work on your channel.

  • @thomaskirby7475
    @thomaskirby7475 4 месяца назад

    at 8:14 you used the open r gun tool, and thats right where i found my leak, prob from it making plastic weak, so we used old style cup links to fix it, and water company also said it was illegal to turn my water meter off 😂😂😂, he said i disnt hear that, and that i was ro call them and not turn meter off myself. new one on me, but it is agianst the law here to turn off your self. but git it fixed do to a craked line where someone had used that tool before .

  • @daijoubu4529
    @daijoubu4529 Год назад +1

    Yeah I'm not gonna try to DIY this, frost line is 4ft here and mine is actually like 6 ft under lol

  • @sickbale
    @sickbale Год назад +1

    👍

    • @BYOTools
      @BYOTools  Год назад +1

      Thanks for watching SB!

  • @AlainStar
    @AlainStar Год назад +2

    🙏👏👍💪

    • @BYOTools
      @BYOTools  Год назад +1

      Thanks for always watching Alain.

  • @JohnGorman355
    @JohnGorman355 Год назад

    Wow! I am surprised your City allowed you to do that type of work. I believe where I live only licensed master plumbers are permitted to evacuate ground and repair broken supply and sewer lines that leave your meter and go out toward the street. Strangely ,the homeowner is responsible for the cost of the repair up to the curb line. Anything after the curb line the City Water Dept is responsible.

    • @DoomDuck1
      @DoomDuck1 Год назад +2

      City is responsible up to the meter. Since his meter was before the leak, it's his responsibility.

    • @chrisd7809
      @chrisd7809 Год назад

      It’s his responsibility but most every state has restrictions on master plumbers doing the work!!! Whether the h/o wants to do the work themselves or not, if the city in fact does have a requirement for a license and they found out he could be liable to pay a hefty fine if they found out ! He could be in the clear though depending on his states/towns code requirements!!

  • @Badenhawk
    @Badenhawk Год назад +1

    2 feet deep? Dang, I wish lol. I live up north so mines at least 5 feet deep.

    • @BYOTools
      @BYOTools  Год назад +1

      FIVE FEET!!!!! Wow! Where do you live, Alaska? LOL!

    • @Badenhawk
      @Badenhawk Год назад

      @@BYOTools Idaho. I looked it up to double check, the city says at least 5-6 feet buried to make sure it's below frost line. And it definitely is, based on where it comes through the wall in the basement.

  • @panamediallc4454
    @panamediallc4454 Год назад

    Relieviate? That’s not a word…

  • @loggledoggle9605
    @loggledoggle9605 Год назад

    Build Your Own Trench

  • @helmanfrow
    @helmanfrow Год назад

    Hard no to giving my water usage data to some private company.

  • @martharetallick204
    @martharetallick204 Год назад +1

    You are raising your daughter right!

  • @daltonmayton3745
    @daltonmayton3745 Год назад

    I work for a water supply system in Texas, I’m not sure about other states, but messing with your water meter at all is a federal offense. That being said you might ask you local water supply if it’s okay to install the reader to track your usage

    • @jameskarrie298
      @jameskarrie298 Год назад +1

      It's not modifying meter at all. You aren't bypassing it.

    • @turbodeiseltruck
      @turbodeiseltruck Год назад

      Karen

    • @daltonmayton3745
      @daltonmayton3745 Год назад

      @@turbodeiseltruck I’m not saying anything bad about it lol. Just saying it wouldn’t hurt to make sure it’s okay first.