Yeah, I'm relatively new to the trade. Less than a year, and I saw one in this dude's shorts once. Sure enough, I go to the supply house and they had them out on the counter. I'm going to look for an excuse to use one now lol.
Noticed how you switched that ball valve shut off from the front to the back. Very good heads up thinking and professional quality look. Lots of these weekend wanna be plumbers do the weirdest stuff. I put two ball valve shut offs on my moms main bathtub supply lines and she got some work done later and the plumber told her she didn't need them and ran it straight line. Now I have to cut off the water at the street to work on that bathroom and the plumber stole $40 worth of valves and charged her to do it.
If the drinking water first flows through components made of less noble materials on its way through the system and then comes into contact with the more noble materials, this risk of corrosion is significantly reduced. In the opposite case, copper ions, for example, are deposited on iron or zinc surfaces, with the less noble zinc or iron dissolving. The result of this is so-called "copper-induced pitting".
That Sioux Chief transition stick is the berries, they make them in regular pvc and CPVC half inch 3/4 and 1 in. Been using them for a couple of years now with no failures or problems
Impressive, i bought home back 2021 and I need to learn how to do plumbing work. Am not going to pay anyone to fix my house. I need to learn my self lol
He lives in the Southern US so the pipes can be exposed and not be at risk of freezing. In Northern regions the water main is brought up in the middle of the house in the basement to protect against freezing. Prost!
I have a genuine question for you and all other plumbers. This is for inside plumbing only, I personally prefer to use PEX, and the crimp fittings. I know some people hate them, and prefer copper. What are the advantages of copper over a PEX? And vice versa in your opinions. I'm originally from middle of nowhere Kansas, and we got snap freezes happening all the time, and pecs is less susceptible to freezing and breaking versus copper. I see copper break pretty often. Just a genuine question I want to learn more I'm not a plumber, so I'm not an expert by any means. Hopefully I'm not starting a huge battle
Not a fan of #Uponor but I like #SharkBite #PushToConnect and #PEX stainless steel clamp ring fittings Use it for irrigation in Colorado It is bomb proof for freeze
The advantage of copper is that it reduces the weight and thickness of the thing that you stick in your pocket. It also provides a ground path all the way from fixtutes back to the basement or water supply. It also can make a more quaint clank noise if you get water hammer. The advantage of pex is less chance of freeze blowout. Easier to fish through new lines and run at angles. Plus you don't really need to have every fixture grounded for the price of copper pipe.
Why do so many plumbing parts that need to be turned and tightened have rounded edges ?? Shouldn't they have flat edges like nuts so you can grip them more, or is there a reason for it ??
For the knipex you're using here, I see you've gone with the dipped handles. Do you find them ok or do they hurt your hands with the torque? I'm between the dipped and the comfort which are a bit chonkier
How is that copper fitting going from the PVC pipe coming out of the ground on the right to the 3/4" copper pipe attached? PVC glue??? WTF? How is that going to seal?
Ummm. Is that galvanized steel to copper? How do you do that? I have to go from galvanized to a copper PSI regulator. I need a dielectric coupler, right?
I'm a beginner, I'd like to know what you use on the external thread pieces. Teflon tape and what else? Can you leave me a product name? Also on UA-cam, I saw from another sanitary installer that he uses only a blue sealing paste on the thread, do you know what that is and what it's called? Thank you very much
Whats with you Americans and your complex plumbing and electrical on the exterior of houses? Here in Toronto (and I think most or all of Canada) these types of things are generally on the interior of houses. What does this thing do? I see teo pipes coming from the ground and one into the house and then a complex set of pipes and valves, but no idea what the purpose is or where those pipes in the ground go, is the water coming out of the pipe coming from the house or one of the pipes in the ground?
The water supply is coming from the ground and into the home but is also feeding the PVC line which most likely is the line for sprinklers and the other being a line for possibly a pool. This piping system is known as a "riser" which holds most of the main water shut offs to all water feeds
With the galvanized there already he should have used galvanized because all he accomplished was throwing the homeowners money away and he should have put the shut off where the galvanized came out of the ground
I’ve never seen fixtures like this, do these only exist where it doesnt go below freezing outside? Why not just use a spigot like the rest of the country
Dude out there going from press to glue to threading lol from PVC to copper to brass... I'm surprised I didn't see any black pipe or stainless steel on there... Lol
that clampy tool: "mehh mehh mehh mehh mehh" 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
😅😂
The sound reminds me of the sound turtles make when mating. It's on UA-cam if you must know 😂
I've been Plumbing for 27 years and I've never seen a PVC to copper adapter like that. Very handy
Old plumbers are soo lost in the sauce lol…. Ain’t nobody threading transitions anymore lmaoooooo
Yeah, I'm relatively new to the trade. Less than a year, and I saw one in this dude's shorts once. Sure enough, I go to the supply house and they had them out on the counter. I'm going to look for an excuse to use one now lol.
That's odd, I'm not a plumber and I've seen them just never had an excuse to use one.
Hey boy back in my day …
@5inister how they lost when they're the ones teaching these young bucks? They just have to much pride to use the new stuff..lol .. that's all..
Get that off my job site boy!
I am not a plumber, but when you lined up the last two pieces, I was like wtf, how did he do that?
That'll be $1350, your welcome
the power of math
You're* @@slimpickens01
The Propress sped up audio never fails to make me chuckle
шо показувати дайте копійок
Boy, you are amazing... Keep it up, Paul Bunyan.
Its great to see someone who knows what their doing
Noticed how you switched that ball valve shut off from the front to the back. Very good heads up thinking and professional quality look. Lots of these weekend wanna be plumbers do the weirdest stuff. I put two ball valve shut offs on my moms main bathtub supply lines and she got some work done later and the plumber told her she didn't need them and ran it straight line. Now I have to cut off the water at the street to work on that bathroom and the plumber stole $40 worth of valves and charged her to do it.
Damn this got intense
If the drinking water first flows through components made of less noble materials on its way through the system and then comes into contact with the more noble materials, this risk of corrosion is significantly reduced. In the opposite case, copper ions, for example, are deposited on iron or zinc surfaces, with the less noble zinc or iron dissolving. The result of this is so-called "copper-induced pitting".
Well thank you Captain Obvious!!
Ya JERKOFF!!
@@slimpickens01I see we’ve found the village idiot
It is well known that brass is considered a dielectric metal so it will isolate the copper from the galvanized pipe.
Enjoyable to watch, appreciate it sir 👍
Work of art that deserves a Perspex cover
I wish I knew more about plumbing to truly appreciate the work you do. I’m a complete amateur but man, that looks very good
It's no big deal! First week service tech stuff!
👏💯Good job Evan keep up the good work 🙂
That Sioux Chief transition stick is the berries, they make them in regular pvc and CPVC half inch 3/4 and 1 in. Been using them for a couple of years now with no failures or problems
That hose bib is way too low 😂pardon my negligence im a roofer but isn't a garden hose gonna kink if you conect it that low??
How tf are you so damn cold with a bandsaw… been trying to mine more and every time my cuts come out more crooked then our government
That was super impressive, curious how long it took in real time?
Love watching your channel ...
So glad!
A masterpiece!
They sell a double check valve sprinkler assembly’s with bleeders if you’re ever interested in saving time and money .
Came out very clean. Nice work.
Much better. Copper looks so good
Is that a galvanized pipe?
Your videos are the bomb 💣!
It’s going so fast I can’t tell what’s happening and don’t understand but looks cool
I enjoy your work, you are a very skilled plumber!
Well thats an interesting little vacuum breaker
Impressive, i bought home back 2021 and I need to learn how to do plumbing work. Am not going to pay anyone to fix my house. I need to learn my self lol
How much you charge for that. Its very clean work. I honestly would have probably redone it pvc.
Need copper for #ProPress
Nice work hoss! 👍🏻
About time I see u pull out that pipe wrench good job u could’ve soder the copper don’t b scared of a little mop gas
I woulda never thought to use pipe dope AND tape. Im gona start doing that. Thank you! 🫡
Its really interesting to see how differently u guys are doing your plumbing in comparison to us in Germany :) really cool tho
He lives in the Southern US so the pipes can be exposed and not be at risk of freezing. In Northern regions the water main is brought up in the middle of the house in the basement to protect against freezing. Prost!
I have a genuine question for you and all other plumbers. This is for inside plumbing only, I personally prefer to use PEX, and the crimp fittings. I know some people hate them, and prefer copper. What are the advantages of copper over a PEX? And vice versa in your opinions.
I'm originally from middle of nowhere Kansas, and we got snap freezes happening all the time, and pecs is less susceptible to freezing and breaking versus copper. I see copper break pretty often. Just a genuine question I want to learn more I'm not a plumber, so I'm not an expert by any means.
Hopefully I'm not starting a huge battle
Not a fan of #Uponor but I like #SharkBite #PushToConnect and #PEX stainless steel clamp ring fittings
Use it for irrigation in Colorado
It is bomb proof for freeze
The advantage of copper is that it reduces the weight and thickness of the thing that you stick in your pocket. It also provides a ground path all the way from fixtutes back to the basement or water supply. It also can make a more quaint clank noise if you get water hammer.
The advantage of pex is less chance of freeze blowout. Easier to fish through new lines and run at angles. Plus you don't really need to have every fixture grounded for the price of copper pipe.
@@don2deliver supply line is PVC so no ground
Also no grounding strap to a rod visible anywhere near the iron pipe going into the house
@@JPetersU2ube The PVC is for irrigation. The steel pipe is the ground to the copper pipe going into the hoise.
@@don2deliver0:00 yep old Orbit 3/4 in. Brass Anti-Siphon Control Valve was connected to PVC irrigation line
The threaded pipe, you added a coper fitting was it for any reason other than size of the valve you were using ?
Why do so many plumbing parts that need to be turned and tightened have rounded edges ?? Shouldn't they have flat edges like nuts so you can grip them more, or is there a reason for it ??
Ummm so that’s two sick days in a row on the voice overs ??? Someone is slacking … no fill ins ?? 🤨🤨
Extremely clean work btw !!
Does nobody sweat pipes anymore?
copper and steel, that's going to work out great...
Nice work, very clean
For the knipex you're using here, I see you've gone with the dipped handles. Do you find them ok or do they hurt your hands with the torque?
I'm between the dipped and the comfort which are a bit chonkier
The difference is negligible
it's like a spaceship !! Great lookin' job boooayyyyy!!!!!!
Nice clean work great job
Err. I think the brass with galvanized pipe will cause corrosion errrrr
Looks great very clean work.
Even the pro-press gives out a sound like a, Screeeeeeeeech!
Luv these vidz!
😮 that's art and you are artist
What use is a tap that close to the ground?
How long does it take you to do a job like this and do you think someone that has no experience could figure out how to do this kind of job themselves
Would of been perfection if you didn't use a coupling after the CPVC
You're the best errrrrrrr
How is that copper fitting going from the PVC pipe coming out of the ground on the right to the 3/4" copper pipe attached? PVC glue??? WTF? How is that going to seal?
The range of tools this guy has is super impressive..
Ummm. Is that galvanized steel to copper? How do you do that? I have to go from galvanized to a copper PSI regulator. I need a dielectric coupler, right?
is that threaded copper connecting those pieces above the bib?
I don’t see any of these set ups on homes here in Texas. Are these a local regulation thing?
Excuse me sir but what is the fitting that goes on the plastic pipe that goes to copper,cheers
I'm a beginner, I'd like to know what you use on the external thread pieces. Teflon tape and what else? Can you leave me a product name? Also on UA-cam, I saw from another sanitary installer that he uses only a blue sealing paste on the thread, do you know what that is and what it's called? Thank you very much
Tape and liquid thread sealant. I like blue monster, but there are others.
No usas manguitos electroloticos para unir hierro y cobre?
Where did you get the green Knipex?! Those are sweet!
Bro you don’t use a dielectric union between brass and galvanized? The tape is not enough. Electrolysis is gonna eat away at your pipe
Why do you use threaded pipe here and pro press fittings in other viseos ? Cost?
You marred that brass, unacceptable in the commercial field. Id lose my license if i was as sloppy as you residential hacks
Hey boy! Get off my jobsite!
Hey boi!! Your watching the wrong channel get out of my job site!!!!
Nice work!
Whats with you Americans and your complex plumbing and electrical on the exterior of houses? Here in Toronto (and I think most or all of Canada) these types of things are generally on the interior of houses. What does this thing do? I see teo pipes coming from the ground and one into the house and then a complex set of pipes and valves, but no idea what the purpose is or where those pipes in the ground go, is the water coming out of the pipe coming from the house or one of the pipes in the ground?
The water supply is coming from the ground and into the home but is also feeding the PVC line which most likely is the line for sprinklers and the other being a line for possibly a pool. This piping system is known as a "riser" which holds most of the main water shut offs to all water feeds
Work of art ...❤
Can someone explain why they needed 3 water pipes connected like this? I find this connection kinda odd
What are the vacuum breakers for? I hope it's not for sprinkler system
Brass on galvanized?
Perfectly acceptable under code, brass is a well known dielectric metal.
With the galvanized there already he should have used galvanized because all he accomplished was throwing the homeowners money away and he should have put the shut off where the galvanized came out of the ground
Connecting brass fittings to galvanized pipe is BAD PLUMBING....
I've seen more failed dielectric unions than brass x galv direct connections
@@jakemlg4906That's cuz they were installed incorrectly not from electrolysis
Is that coupling lined with PVC? Do you know what
American plumbing is a horror movie
I'm sad that there's no commentary. Also countering the haters before they respond.
That's quite the Christmas tree!
_ERRRRRRRR_
Do you have a tool list posted somewhere?
How come no shut off where the galvanized came out of the ground and why waste the homeowners money on brass when the rest is galvanized
I’ve never seen fixtures like this, do these only exist where it doesnt go below freezing outside? Why not just use a spigot like the rest of the country
The two backflow/anti siphon were for the 0:36 supply coming from the street mostly for the spigot and then for 0:52 irrigation
What he thought was a 10 minute job took an hour!
How do you connect copper to that PVC pipe coming out of the ground!??
Anyone know?
Errrrrrr.. damn good job!😊
My eyes are hurting cuz if the focusing in and out 😂😂😂 I thought I needed glasses
Where is the other water line feeding ?
No soy plomero,solo aprendiz,no entiendo todos esos caños, alguien podría explicarme qué son?.
Dang thats nice
Какой уплотнитель на резьбу используете ?
Why no soldering?
Looks like a polish Xmas tree
That’s some job security in 10 years when the o-rings get brittle and fail.
where can i get the green knipex? 😅
Dude out there going from press to glue to threading lol from PVC to copper to brass... I'm surprised I didn't see any black pipe or stainless steel on there... Lol
In retro work, you have to work with what you have.
That valve was like 💦💦 then he was like t
🏃💨💨👨🔧
Wait a sec, pro press to pvc? Now I've seen it all!! 😅
No voiceover must be killing long john silvers value box
Demolished it
I have like one channel lock wrench that I call my plumber’s wrench… I’m such a noob
Nice job but I would've raised it
Ну значит есть и у вас пламтиковые трубы, зачем эти сложности с этой медью.
Beast
Why is there so much goin on in one spot