I believe they have their place. In the majority of the repair/modification work I've done, I've only used them a couple of times. I'd rather sweat, or solder , a joint and know it's going to stand up to the test of time over relying on a rubber seal. To this day I've never been called back to repair a leak.
Shark bite is for temporary fixes such as service or for testing. It's not a permanent fix. No one should ever think that. Call a licensed plumber. Or don't do it.
A few years ago, I paid $175 to fix a pin hole leak in the copper pipe and it took the plumber no more than 20 mins! Now, I can do it within 10 minutes using Sharkbites. I saved myself a few hundred bucks by installing replacing leaking shut off valves under the kitchen sink and bathroom sinks, and fixed a leak myself :).
@I want to Go Home stop spreading this nonsense. Sharkbite (push connect) fittings are code approved behind walls. That wouldn't be the case if they weren't meant for permanent repair
@I want to Go Home Lol, that's what plumbers say because obviously they lose a lot of business. People are able to fix their pipes right away instead of waiting for the plumber to do a sloppy job and charge them an arm and a leg. Sharkbites are guaranteed 25 years but could last a lifetime. Same story with the soldering. Could last a lifetime or a year depending on who does it.
Excellent video! Clear, concise directions and diction. No rambling on, story telling or philosophizing. Superb lighting and video quality. And no attempt to be a comedian! Congratulations on one of the best home repair videos I've seen so far. Keep up the great work! Also, no unneeded and annoying background music.
Wonderful explanation! You did an awesome job explaining how to use the shark bite fittings and the necessary precautions y do it well. Thank you so very much for your time and effort!
This is the best how to video I’ve seen in a while !! Explanatory, detailed but easy for us newbies and quick not drawn out questions explanations and who you are or where you live or what you ate for lunch. LOL. Edited perfectly. Thank you. I now have confidence to do this !!
I've been dreading a fix to my hose bib and leaky shut off. I've sweated pipes years ago and remember it wasn't super easy. This is just what I need to get that job done. TY
Great info! I had a pin leak in the cap on a short stub right under the floor. I couldn't get in there to cut the stub off and put on a Sharkbite end cap, so I just cut the horizontal section on either side of the stub and replaced it with a short piece of PEX using Sharkbite couplings to connect it to the copper. It's also useful to know about the slide coupling that I could have used if I didn't have enough flex in the pipes to get them into the new couplings. I took both types under the house and was able to use the regular couplings, so the slide coupling can be returned. Thanks again!
The space I had between the Joists was very tight and I had to replace a valve that gave me water to my outside spigots. Now I used a Sharkbite for the valve (quarter turn ball valve and a slip joint). The mistake I made was pushing the slip connection to close to the soldered "t" fitting. The small plastic release tool would not fit so I could move it to connect the pipe between it and the valve. Went back to Lowes and got th 1/2 inch tool to be able to compress the fitting allowing the slip joint to move onto the pipe and complete the connection. Held my breath and turned on the water and not a single drop . Works well in my open basement.
Why do you need the copper jumper cable to maintain an electrical current? Does that have something to do with minimizing corrosion or something else entirely?
Sorry, late to the party. That is a ground wire for your electrical system. If you install a SharkBite, it becomes an insulator. The jumper assures you still have a connection to ground.
I have 5 shark bites in my house installed on pvc and copper and it’s been 5 years and no complaints at all .A plumber told me they could last 30 to 35 years depending on the pipe .
You're about to save me 5000$ lmao. The plumber came and basically gave me a scary scenario but after watching some of your stuff and a few other videos, I feel like it's something I can absolutely do myself. I have some experience already, but I was super afraid because I don't have shutoff valves in my house (we bought a fixer upper and boy... boy it has been an adventure) i was scared to do it myself. Now I know I can do it!
A pinhole leak in copper can be fixed easily by using an ice pick to wallow out the hole. Use sand paper to rough the area around the hole, flux the area, use your hand held propane/ map gas torch & heat area / solder over hole area with a buildup bead of solder. I have fixes over twenty years old using this method. 😀
hehe i always say you should repair what you can, if you can. That way you will learn at least the basics. Sure, you aren't a plummer if you do it yourself at home, it isn't your job and you don't do it day in and day out, watching someone move a piano doesn't make you a piano mover, experience does. But just trying the basic stuff to repair it yourself you can always get a real plummer to do it if you aren't sucessful. I can do most repair work myself except for major pipe work. Like today i had a copper water pipe burst for my kitchen, so went under the house, found the break, went to home depot, got a cutter, extra pipe, 2 fittings, sandpaper, etc then got home and went to work and said oh, i got 1/2 inch copper to fix it, but its a 3/8 pipe. There ya go, not a plummer, but im trying !
Just FYI, the white plastic insert can be removed from the new fitting when installing on copper pipe. It's just a stiffener that's included for pex jobs and it slightly narrows the effective diameter of the pipe. It's not an issue with pex but when it comes to copper it's better to keep the interior diameter as consistent as possible to prevent flow changes that could wear the copper over time.
@@CaresforAll yes because the end of the pipe still goes against the back of the fitting and the better fit the better, less worry about any sort of leak. Get in the habit of ALWAYS smoothing out those copper pipe endings it doesn't take long, debur and fine sandpaper to ensure a nice tight grip. Always debur, clean, dry, fine sandpaper.
Lovely Setup fitting,I used one yesterday on copper tubing from hotwater tank to wall, (8 inches overall length the copper tubing wasnt in line with each other exactly and it did leak because of thisand it wasnt the fault of this fitting, I will use them in instances of tight places and directly aligning piping, they are expensive though
So if your electrical system in your home is grounded thru the coper pipes which is code and often happens with copper pipe the theory is it going through the concret works as a supplemental ground for your home. Also if wiring happens to put current on the copper it will ground out instead of sending electricity through the piping in your home causing it to shock you through the water
The copper jumper cable was a great tip that I didn't think about. Also remember that the insertion depth for Shark Bite Max is different from the prior generation of Shark Bite fittings!
I always heard plumbers talking badly about shark bites but I've used them a few times and they are easy to install and never had any issues for years.
I had a plumber in for a gas issue and he looked at some of my cold lines (full of drips, replacing tomorrow myself as he never got back to me). he had no real issue with sharkbite other than the cost. I think plumbers probably aren't in love with them because a homeowner isn't going to pay extra for work with sharkbites, but it's probably easy to get to a couple of hundred bucks in fittings in a day.
I agree with the pros I would not put these behind a wall. I will tell you this for the average joe under sink sharkbites work perfectly. I spent a lot of time researching this topic. I knew a torch was not a good idea for a first time copper pipe fix it guy like me. I went with standard compression ring fitting by unscrewing the old 1/4 turn and installing new nut, compression ting and new 1/4 turn. Leaked like crazy. I cut off the new quarter turn at he nut. Put the shark bite on and it is like new no leak.
Just installed a sharbite tee for 1/2 copper pipe. Two of the pipes are tight. The third, top of the tee, the pipe woiggles side to side, but is tight and locked in based on the measurement using the measurement tool. Haven't turned on the water yet. Have you encountered a wiggle with a shark bite?
Do you have to use the shark bite coupling with the tube inside on pinhole leaks? Is the white tube inside the coupling a must have, cause the ones I got don’t have the white tube inside.
Is it sufficient to push straight on. Is any twisting required? I want to join two copper pieces but copper pieces can't be turned because each is already soldered. I have a sharkbite and I noticed bag said to push on and turn. Is the whole connector turned or only the end attached to the pipe.
I have a copper main water shutoff valve that will not shutoff the water going to the house, is it possible to replace that valve using shark bits on both ends like you did with the straight run of copper pipe? Also the copper pipe is next to a stud in the wall. Any ideas on how to cut the pipe?
I heard that when joining pex to copper the shark bite fitting had to have different ends. To accommodate the copper that end needed to be black. The pex end need be mustard colour?
OK, after 5:00 he says slip on fittings don't work with pex, then he goes ahead and uses pex. so am I missing something? Also gets confusing when he says flex, and then says pex.
When you see pipes with a pin hole like that that means you have to take out a piece of pipe and examine it if you may be replacing all the pipe in your house either Japanese pipe or you have a lot of water problems.
Is it possible to spot pinhole leaks before they become a problem, assuming the pipe is visible? I am repairing two pinhole leaks in the same section of pipe, and I think I may see corrosion beginning on a third spot on that same pipe. Is that third spot a pinhole-leak-to-be?
I'm getting the two pinholes repaired in a couple days and am thinking about asking them to just replace that entire pipe to prevent nasty surprises in the future.
The only ones that are talking bad about SharkBites are plumbers, that don't want to loose their jobs, SharkBites is a great product, that saves money and last a long time.
Do you need to take out the plastic inner sleeve to use on copper ? I am trying to get it to fit but the fitting is loose...maybe not pushing all the way on ?
At end of video, it mentions needing to maintain electrical continuity in a copper system … that’s a new concept to me, but sort of makes sense … can you/anyone share useful search terms or phrases that help with learning more? I’m guessing something like “copper pipes electrical continuity” can get me started, but I would also appreciate anything anyone else can share who is further along this crazy journey of home ownership than me!
is there a difference in thickness in copper pipe that was made 30 years ago compared to todays copper. I tried using the shark bites but i struggled to insert shark bites
@@mmburgess11 I finally bought a copper pipe cutter, I guess it was my cutting from a hacksaw I was using and causing it to flare out to a bigger finish, if that makes sense
Did good but prefer solder get the plumber its worth the money and done right been on too many jobs on them failing and when using copper take out the white piece keep it in for pex
How much copper do you remove from the existing copper pipe? You said 1” but it didn’t show you cut 1 inch! I cut it at the pinhole and removed about 3/4” of the existing pipe. Did you cut a section out of the the pipe or just at the pinhole!
Hi - my copper pipe seems to be 5/8" close to slit and 1/2" closer to outer edges. Is it swelling? How can I be sure of which size given that there are not a lot of products for 5/8"?
I plumbed my entire house with pex and shark bites over 8yrs ago without any issues. The difference in life is all in the deburing and support. Remember these o rings are the same material in almost all faucets, valves and water hose connections. Only plumbers say there bad because they dont make money on self repairs. Smh
I need to know why an elbow snakebit would leak its not a major leak but it's the second time it happens. The guy who did the plumbing tightened but it's leaking again idk what's going on
Lmao anyone taking this man’s advice, beware, many many homes have had there basements gutted and redone because of these sharkbites… they fail, and they fail fairly quickly.
@@Bundysvideos source? I don't trust you or the UA-camr. Gonna need a source or proof of that. Show me data that shows how they fail, why they fail, and how quickly they fail. If not, shut your mouth and quit shitting on people.
Would you use SharkBites to repair copper pipes?
yes, I would and have, but until this video I never realized how much they remind me of the Chinese finger traps I played with when I was a kid.
I believe they have their place. In the majority of the repair/modification work I've done, I've only used them a couple of times. I'd rather sweat, or solder , a joint and know it's going to stand up to the test of time over relying on a rubber seal. To this day I've never been called back to repair a leak.
Shark bite is for temporary fixes such as service or for testing. It's not a permanent fix. No one should ever think that. Call a licensed plumber. Or don't do it.
100 percent
Richard J They’re rated for permanent use.
A few years ago, I paid $175 to fix a pin hole leak in the copper pipe and it took the plumber no more than 20 mins! Now, I can do it within 10 minutes using Sharkbites. I saved myself a few hundred bucks by installing replacing leaking shut off valves under the kitchen sink and bathroom sinks, and fixed a leak myself :).
@I want to Go Home stop spreading this nonsense. Sharkbite (push connect) fittings are code approved behind walls. That wouldn't be the case if they weren't meant for permanent repair
@I want to Go Home Lol, that's what plumbers say because obviously they lose a lot of business. People are able to fix their pipes right away instead of waiting for the plumber to do a sloppy job and charge them an arm and a leg. Sharkbites are guaranteed 25 years but could last a lifetime. Same story with the soldering. Could last a lifetime or a year depending on who does it.
Looks like you got 2 pipes that day lol
@I want to Go Home yea it's 35
@I want to Go Home womp womp you'd have to get the one that's been under there for 2 years otw
Excellent video! Clear, concise directions and diction. No rambling on, story telling or philosophizing. Superb lighting and video quality. And no attempt to be a comedian! Congratulations on one of the best home repair videos I've seen so far. Keep up the great work! Also, no unneeded and annoying background music.
Excellent instructions, better than what Home Depot has on its web site. Thanks for sharing!
Wonderful explanation! You did an awesome job explaining how to use the shark bite fittings and the necessary precautions y do it well. Thank you so very much for your time and effort!
This is the best how to video I’ve seen in a while !! Explanatory, detailed but easy for us newbies and quick not drawn out questions explanations and who you are or where you live or what you ate for lunch. LOL. Edited perfectly. Thank you. I now have confidence to do this !!
I appreciate your kindness, and acknowledging there’s too much BS on social 🙌🏼
I've been dreading a fix to my hose bib and leaky shut off. I've sweated pipes years ago and remember it wasn't super easy. This is just what I need to get that job done. TY
Extremely helpful. Very well shown and narrated. Thank you, great job!!
Has to be the most informative video on pex.
Great info! I had a pin leak in the cap on a short stub right under the floor. I couldn't get in there to cut the stub off and put on a Sharkbite end cap, so I just cut the horizontal section on either side of the stub and replaced it with a short piece of PEX using Sharkbite couplings to connect it to the copper.
It's also useful to know about the slide coupling that I could have used if I didn't have enough flex in the pipes to get them into the new couplings. I took both types under the house and was able to use the regular couplings, so the slide coupling can be returned.
Thanks again!
Love how you get right to the point.
.bing.....bam...boom.. easy to understand..
I used shark bite for the first time today works great. Saved me all kinds of money not getting a plumber or buying all the soldering equipment.
bs"d Excellent video - chock full of helpful details, no extra verbiage or distracting stimuli, moves quickly... thank you!
The space I had between the Joists was very tight and I had to replace a valve that gave me water to my outside spigots. Now I used a Sharkbite for the valve (quarter turn ball valve and a slip joint). The mistake I made was pushing the slip connection to close to the soldered "t" fitting. The small plastic release tool would not fit so I could move it to connect the pipe between it and the valve. Went back to Lowes and got th 1/2 inch tool to be able to compress the fitting allowing the slip joint to move onto the pipe and complete the connection. Held my breath and turned on the water and not a single drop . Works well in my open basement.
Why do you need the copper jumper cable to maintain an electrical current? Does that have something to do with minimizing corrosion or something else entirely?
Sorry, late to the party. That is a ground wire for your electrical system. If you install a SharkBite, it becomes an insulator. The jumper assures you still have a connection to ground.
I have 5 shark bites in my house installed on pvc and copper and it’s been 5 years and no complaints at all .A plumber told me they could last 30 to 35 years depending on the pipe .
You're about to save me 5000$ lmao. The plumber came and basically gave me a scary scenario but after watching some of your stuff and a few other videos, I feel like it's something I can absolutely do myself. I have some experience already, but I was super afraid because I don't have shutoff valves in my house (we bought a fixer upper and boy... boy it has been an adventure) i was scared to do it myself. Now I know I can do it!
What would the ground wire be for if its a water line, just curious.
A pinhole leak in copper can be fixed easily by using an ice pick to wallow out the hole. Use sand paper to rough the area around the hole, flux the area, use your hand held propane/ map gas torch & heat area / solder over hole area with a buildup bead of solder. I have fixes over twenty years old using this method. 😀
Such a good video. I didn't understand until watching your VID. I think Sasquatch could get the idea here. Thank you!
Just wanted to say thank you
thank you 😊 hopefully the tips were helpful
Great video and visuals! Well done! I think I can be a plumber now!
Thank you buddy
hehe i always say you should repair what you can, if you can. That way you will learn at least the basics. Sure, you aren't a plummer if you do it yourself at home, it isn't your job and you don't do it day in and day out, watching someone move a piano doesn't make you a piano mover, experience does. But just trying the basic stuff to repair it yourself you can always get a real plummer to do it if you aren't sucessful. I can do most repair work myself except for major pipe work. Like today i had a copper water pipe burst for my kitchen, so went under the house, found the break, went to home depot, got a cutter, extra pipe, 2 fittings, sandpaper, etc then got home and went to work and said oh, i got 1/2 inch copper to fix it, but its a 3/8 pipe. There ya go, not a plummer, but im trying !
Just FYI, the white plastic insert can be removed from the new fitting when installing on copper pipe. It's just a stiffener that's included for pex jobs and it slightly narrows the effective diameter of the pipe. It's not an issue with pex but when it comes to copper it's better to keep the interior diameter as consistent as possible to prevent flow changes that could wear the copper over time.
Totally agree
I have to explain to a lot of people that the insert comes out for copper fittings. Great comment
How do you take the plastic insert out?
@@louisshorterii6385 I use a pair of needle nose pliers to grab and pull out easily.
so in that case, it it still necessary to debur in the inside of copper pipe?
@@CaresforAll yes because the end of the pipe still goes against the back of the fitting and the better fit the better, less worry about any sort of leak. Get in the habit of ALWAYS smoothing out those copper pipe endings it doesn't take long, debur and fine sandpaper to ensure a nice tight grip. Always debur, clean, dry, fine sandpaper.
Lovely Setup fitting,I used one yesterday on copper tubing from hotwater tank to wall, (8 inches overall length the copper tubing wasnt in line with each other exactly and it did leak because of thisand it wasnt the fault of this fitting, I will use them in instances of tight places and directly aligning piping, they are expensive though
Can you explain the jumper cable? I was not aware pipes needed to be jumped?
Yea im confused by that too
So if your electrical system in your home is grounded thru the coper pipes which is code and often happens with copper pipe the theory is it going through the concret works as a supplemental ground for your home. Also if wiring happens to put current on the copper it will ground out instead of sending electricity through the piping in your home causing it to shock you through the water
Thankyou so much with this video. You really helped me.
Yes, this is spot one and very useful and helpful and easy to follow for most homeowners and people who like to do their own repairs- Thank you!!
Thanks for the tutorial, you guys are awesome 👌 👏 👍
The copper jumper cable was a great tip that I didn't think about.
Also remember that the insertion depth for Shark Bite Max is different from the prior generation of Shark Bite fittings!
Quick question: the 1 inch separation, did you cut 1 inch section of the pipe, meaning did you make 2 cuts with the autocut tool?
thank you very much. love to see very helpful and information on your videos
Great video. Why the jump wire? I didn't know the copper pipe provided any electrical abilty.
I always heard plumbers talking badly about shark bites but I've used them a few times and they are easy to install and never had any issues for years.
I had a plumber in for a gas issue and he looked at some of my cold lines (full of drips, replacing tomorrow myself as he never got back to me). he had no real issue with sharkbite other than the cost. I think plumbers probably aren't in love with them because a homeowner isn't going to pay extra for work with sharkbites, but it's probably easy to get to a couple of hundred bucks in fittings in a day.
Yes! I have a leak in my copper pipe and now I can fix it myself! Thank you!
I agree with the pros I would not put these behind a wall. I will tell you this for the average joe under sink sharkbites work perfectly. I spent a lot of time researching this topic. I knew a torch was not a good idea for a first time copper pipe fix it guy like me. I went with standard compression ring fitting by unscrewing the old 1/4 turn and installing new nut, compression ting and new 1/4 turn. Leaked like crazy. I cut off the new quarter turn at he nut. Put the shark bite on and it is like new no leak.
Hi I thought pex work on slip fitting . Can you confirm please . I saw several video slip T use PEX pipe . Thanks
great video u make it seem so easy and with all the shark bite equipment it does look easy enough thank u jeff
Very helpful thanks!!
Great video and great information
Just installed a sharbite tee for 1/2 copper pipe. Two of the pipes are tight. The third, top of the tee, the pipe woiggles side to side, but is tight and locked in based on the measurement using the measurement tool. Haven't turned on the water yet. Have you encountered a wiggle with a shark bite?
PLZ explain better the "Jumper Cable" electric continuous.... that you mention at end of video !!! Thks
Very good content congratulations
Thank you 🙏🏼
How would you clean out a vertical pipe? Wouldn't the burr fall into the pipe?
Do you have to use the shark bite coupling with the tube inside on pinhole leaks? Is the white tube inside the coupling a must have, cause the ones I got don’t have the white tube inside.
Hello
Super information 👍
Very helpful and well done, thanks?!
This is an awesome idea! Thank you for this :)
thank you
if both sides are fixed, how did you get the fitting on?
Thanks great video
Is this stuff a permanent solution as to avoid soldering?
amazing video
Is it sufficient to push straight on. Is any twisting required? I want to join two copper pieces but copper pieces can't be turned because each is already soldered. I have a sharkbite and I noticed bag said to push on and turn. Is the whole connector turned or only the end attached to the pipe.
What’s the copper pipe jumper cable about??
Super great useful video
I have a copper main water shutoff valve that will not shutoff the water going to the house, is it possible to replace that valve using shark bits on both ends like you did with the straight run of copper pipe? Also the copper pipe is next to a stud in the wall. Any ideas on how to cut the pipe?
I heard that when joining pex to copper the shark bite fitting had to have different ends. To accommodate the copper that end needed to be black. The pex end need be mustard colour?
Awesome info which I will use, thanks HRT
Helpful,Thank you a lot
Thanks for mentioning the white pipe inter fittings on the Sharkbite. I was going to remove it for a copper pipe.
What's the point of that copper jumper cable? I've never saw it used before.
Thanks so much!
Thank you for your help :0)
OK, after 5:00 he says slip on fittings don't work with pex, then he goes ahead and uses pex. so am I missing something? Also gets confusing when he says flex, and then says pex.
What were all the fittings and tools used in th8s video
When you see pipes with a pin hole like that that means you have to take out a piece of pipe and examine it if you may be replacing all the pipe in your house either Japanese pipe or you have a lot of water problems.
Do you do a jumper cable if its at the end of the pipe to like a toilet shut off valve?
How important is that jumper cable? Seemed important but kinda went by it fast.
Is it possible to spot pinhole leaks before they become a problem, assuming the pipe is visible? I am repairing two pinhole leaks in the same section of pipe, and I think I may see corrosion beginning on a third spot on that same pipe. Is that third spot a pinhole-leak-to-be?
I'm getting the two pinholes repaired in a couple days and am thinking about asking them to just replace that entire pipe to prevent nasty surprises in the future.
I love these shark bites on projects we are working on here at our channel! They are super easy and really hold up over time! Love the video!
thank you, yes, they’re great. Been using them for a decade with no leaks, knock on wood. Prepping the pipe is crucial
Home Repair Tutor well now you said it. Lol. Good luck fixing them. Jk
Can you connect copper pipe with PVC pipe with the SharkBite?
Yes
Thanks
The only ones that are talking bad about SharkBites are plumbers, that don't want to loose their jobs, SharkBites is a great product, that saves money and last a long time.
Perfect
Thank you very much it's excellent
thanks!
Awesome! Thanks!
Do you need to take out the plastic inner sleeve to use on copper ? I am trying to get it to fit but the fitting is loose...maybe not pushing all the way on ?
Yea take it out
You can but you don’t have to. That plastic is meant for plex piping but you can still leave it in for copper.
i just was thinking today on this kind of fix
my main concern is the fire hazard
im glad you made this video
The Copper jumper cable part confused me....Can you elaborate? what does electricity have to do with a water pipe?
Thank you very helpful
Shark bites, CPVC, and corrugated flex 12" terminations are the Hallmark of shade tree repairs.
How can I prevent electrolysis in the pipes?
Super!
At end of video, it mentions needing to maintain electrical continuity in a copper system … that’s a new concept to me, but sort of makes sense … can you/anyone share useful search terms or phrases that help with learning more?
I’m guessing something like “copper pipes electrical continuity” can get me started, but I would also appreciate anything anyone else can share who is further along this crazy journey of home ownership than me!
Are all water lines 3/4
Good thing about sharkbite is you don't have to dry the pipe versus soldering.
Can I use it on a t joint
My pipe wil not move back and forth when cut now what and little oversize coupler ?
If I have to replace a "L" shape corroded copper pipe, PEX will work (in the wall) ? Thank you.
is there a difference in thickness in copper pipe that was made 30 years ago compared to todays copper. I tried using the shark bites but i struggled to insert shark bites
I'm finding that out as well...did you get it to work?
@@mmburgess11 I finally bought a copper pipe cutter, I guess it was my cutting from a hacksaw I was using and causing it to flare out to a bigger finish, if that makes sense
Did good but prefer solder get the plumber its worth the money and done right been on too many jobs on them failing and when using copper take out the white piece keep it in for pex
Did you remove 1 inch between those two pipes?
How much copper do you remove from the existing copper pipe? You said 1” but it didn’t show you cut 1 inch! I cut it at the pinhole and removed about 3/4” of the existing pipe. Did you cut a section out of the the pipe or just at the pinhole!
Hi - my copper pipe seems to be 5/8" close to slit and 1/2" closer to outer edges. Is it swelling? How can I be sure of which size given that there are not a lot of products for 5/8"?
Actual 5/8" OD...
This is my current problem. 1/2 inch shark bite doesn’t go
I plumbed my entire house with pex and shark bites over 8yrs ago without any issues. The difference in life is all in the deburing and support. Remember these o rings are the same material in almost all faucets, valves and water hose connections. Only plumbers say there bad because they dont make money on self repairs. Smh
exactly
No.. solder is the best way. It’s a permeant fix that has been proved for decades.
Yep, when installed properly, SharkBites are really great.
If you don’t have a Gauge how far you push the pipe in
till it squarely stops.
I need to know why an elbow snakebit would leak its not a major leak but it's the second time it happens. The guy who did the plumbing tightened but it's leaking again idk what's going on
Hi, what gauge copper wire did you use to bridge the grounding?
Shark bite is No.1 enemy to all overpriced plumbers out there.There is a solution for all DIY average Joe out there👍
Lmao anyone taking this man’s advice, beware, many many homes have had there basements gutted and redone because of these sharkbites… they fail, and they fail fairly quickly.
Until you actually learn plumbing code and realize they are not allowed inside walls . Experience = fast fix . You pay for Experience
@@Bundysvideos source? I don't trust you or the UA-camr. Gonna need a source or proof of that.
Show me data that shows how they fail, why they fail, and how quickly they fail. If not, shut your mouth and quit shitting on people.
thank you for this video