Whole House Repipe DIY with Pex
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- Опубліковано 11 кві 2022
- How to repipe your whole house with Pex.
Forced to DIY my whole house repipe. DIY Pex plumbing installation. Disclaimer: don't try this at home but as you can see it really wasn't that bad.
plumbing work in house - Навчання та стиль
I am anticipating repiping older ranch style with basement. Your task video makes me a little more confident. I too will price a couple pros first. Thanks
Wow! Awesome, thanks for the video, very helpful
Thanks. Glad it was helpful!
I'm considering a pex repipe for my home as a diy project. Very helpful video.
Sounds great, thanks. I recommend checking with your local code department. You may have to get a permit. There are homeowner permits out there but exclusions apply.
You’re welcome. I want to do this the right way and making sure I take care of the necessary paperwork is a part of the process. I want to do it right the first time.
The weakest point in a pex connection are the fittings. You may want to house those line splitters in some kind of insulation (like make a box from rigid styrofoam). When our house was built, I asked why the pex line was pulled into an interior wall from the attic and a splitter used. Then the lines from the splitter went back into the attic. Builder asked plumber and plumber said the splitter needed to be in the conditioned space since it was the weakest part.
Thanks for the advice. The rigid foam box is a great idea. I tried to use mostly brass fittings in the attic but of course the multi line fittings are plastic. I have concerns about the integrity of those over time. Hopefully I'll be home if one breaks.
@@phillipreborn you can get smart water detectors. put one in the box housing the multi-line fittings and it will alert you (home or not) if there is a leak. if you spend more you can get smart accessories that will shut off the main if there is a leak somewhere, but yeah. i have a detector in my garage in case there is a rain leak intrusion it alerts me so that I can go move my wood etc.
Great job. Coming from a plumber of 20 years, it looks good. Only thing I wouldve done different is to use as few fittings in the walls as possible. If you were doing manifold homeruns, one solid length frommanifolf to fixture has less chance of having a leak than a run with a bunch of 90s and couplings in the line behind the walls. Just mho
Thanks! I had a plumber mention that adding an expansion/pressure tank on the hot water heater is code now too.
great. wish more home owners had your gumption.
Thanks 👍
Kudos man. I am terrified by all things plumbing.
Thanks. Yep it can be risky.
Feels. I've got a slab leak that I've isolated. I'm doing my own repipe through my attic with PEXa as well. I'm adding in a line heater and some leak detectors. I found in the past that long sweep 90 degree conduit elbows can help with bends without damaging the PEX like the metal ones
Sounds like a good idea. I need to add leak detectors also.
You’re crazy dude! But mad props haha
🤣 Thank you very much bro! This one was a bit extreme.
I know this is an older video, but i am about to attempt the same exact thing. I experienced the same issue with plumbers and my home warranty/home insurance not covering the cost. My estimate was 5k. The only thing that sucks is i wont have a day off from work til after xmas....its not going to be a quick process.
Nope and you will need a permit if you don't want any issues when you go to sell. If you've reported it to your insurance it may come up if you ever need to switch too.
@oarDIY did you have issues with that stuff after you finished? I figured I would technically need to get a permit, but I didn't think about having to notify my insurance company...they aren't willing to even let me make a claim since there isn't any visible damage to my property at the moment. So no matter what I would have to come out of pocket for everything. I did see you did this work in Florida and I have heard there have been insurance companies refusing to cover houses with pex over there, is that true? I live in texas and there haven't been any issues with it as of now. The plumber that gave me a quote was essentially going to replace everything with pex just like I'm going to do.
Congrats on the finished project! Did you pull the old piping out of the house or just leave it in place?
I capped the old copper and left it in place.
Nice work! What kind of transmission did you use to connect pvc to pex A?
I used a threaded male PVC connector to a brass/copper fitting. I've heard that it is recommended to use a threaded female PVC adapter then into a male brass/copper fitting. From there I sweated on a copper to pex fitting.
My brother repiped the whole house from cast iron to copper. But the plumbers did not repipe a 2inch wide black plastic tube? Were those necessary to repipe or no?
That might have been the drain lines. I'm not sure.
I'm just a DIYer, but I'm reasonably confident in saying that any 2 inch plastic pipes in a residence would be a DWV (drain, waste, venting) pipe - mostly like ABS plastic (PVC is usually white). Hot and Cold supply lines in houses are typically 3/4" inch, reduced down to 1/2" wherever it branches off to an individual faucet (or similar).
what did you use to locate the old plastic pipes behind your walls?
My old water pipes were copper and they were right below/behind the shut off valves near each fixture. Is that what you meant?
@@phillipreborn I just learned that I will have to replace my entire water pipe system myself, and I did see something on another site that said plumbers have to use something to locate some of the pipes behind the walls. I have zero experience with houses so I didn’t think that I’d probably be fine if I just follow behind the valves like you just mentioned.
@@tamsonebarley3520 did you complete the task?
you want to have insulation between your hot and cold to prevent condensation.
Thanks for the advice. I ended up insulating everything.
Did you connect with PVC in a few spots? If so, you can’t do it on hot water lines.
Also, just a tip, your straps should be on the inside of the 2x4” not the front. Then you can’t put the drywall back up😂😂
Hello, no hot water lines were connected to PVC. There was only PVC entering the house then converted to Pex from there. Those were inset from the wall. It was a 2x6 wall separating both bathrooms to accommodate the plumbing. Thanks for watching and commenting!
How come you're insulating the supply and not just hot water pipes?
To help keep the cold and heat out.
Did you ever end up getting it inspected?
Not yet. I'm probably going to consult with a plumber first.
That's a lotta piping.
Indeed, a whole durn repipe.
Okay but what about code and inspections?
Never heard of her.
What state is this?
Florida
What was that yellow and black tool
It is a manual pex (type A/uponor) expander.
Insurance is a damn scam. You pay and then the moment you need them they don't do anything for you.
It feels like that sometimes 🤣🥲
You may be nuts but not for repiping your own house. I did it ans aved thousands.
🤣 thanks
☹️ pr໐๓໐Ş๓
Hindi?
man so many things wrong
thanks
Like what?
Can you name just 2?