Hi Bob:

I enjoy plumbing also.

as the name is derived from the latin word for Lead (plumbum) I find it odd 
that they have removed lead from solder!

i find the lead-free solder difficult to use, so where possible use either 
compression or push fittings.

David

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Bob Kennedy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, January 14, 2008 11:57 PM
Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] I hate plumbing!


> Always the odd ball, I like plumbing.  It has gotten a bit harder to 
> solder since they have done away with led in the solder but I can still 
> sweat a pipe together.
>
> For those that don't like risking a fire in the house, they now make a 
> solderless compound for copper pipes.  It is much like the C A form of 
> epoxy I use to build golf clubs with.  It comes in a can and you brush it 
> on like the stuff used with PVC.  Great idea for places where a torch is 
> dangerous.  I'll find the link and send it along later.
>
>
>  ----- Original Message ----- 
>  From: David Ferrin
>  To: [email protected]
>  Sent: Monday, January 14, 2008 1:45 PM
>  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] I hate plumbing!
>
>
>  The question is who if anybody likes plumbing actually. Oh the joys of
>  owning a home.
>  David Ferrin
>  www.jaws-users.com
>  ----- Original Message ----- 
>  From: Dan Rossi
>  To: [email protected]
>  Sent: Monday, January 14, 2008 1:39 PM
>  Subject: [BlindHandyMan] I hate plumbing!
>
>  This weekend was spent in battle with the pipes. The war was waged on two
>  fronts, the kitchen faucet, and an unused toilet in the basement.
>
>  the faucet had the upper hand for a while, but it now lays in many pieces
>  at the bottom of my trash. Score one for the blind guy!
>
>  This was an old faucet with three separate mountings, one each for the 
> two
>  taps, and one for the faucet itself. I spent a lot of time under the sink
>  with the mother of all basin wrenches trying to get the nuts off the taps
>  to no avail. I tried taking them out from above, but there was no way to
>  grab onto the little collars, which also happened to be puttied to the
>  sink surface. Much to Teresa's dismay, I, screaming that I would exact my
>  vengeance on the faucet, ran to the basement and retrieved my Dremel.
>  Several broken cutting disks later, after much prying, cursing and
>  snarling, the taps and faucet were removed from the sink and the sink
>  surface was not marred from the Dremel.
>
>  Of course, after I slid the new faucet in place, the flex tubes attached
>  to the faucet were not long enough to reach the shut-offs under the sink.
>  That meant, not surprisingly, another trip to the store, but that had to
>  wait until Sunday.
>
>  Sunday morning I took a closer look at the toilet in the basement. This
>  is a cruddy old toilet stuck in the corner of the basement with a plywood
>  wall on none side and a partial plywood door. These are very common in
>  Pittsburgh. The guts of the tank were completely rusted and broken and
>  since the shut-off to the toilet didn't actually shut the water off, 
> there
>  had been a paint can wedged into the tank to keep the fill valve closed.
>  I had upgraded the paint can to a 20 pound dumbell but figured I should
>  probably fix the shut-off and take care of the tank guts while I was at
>  it.
>
>  Off to the store. We found some flexible tubes to extend the faucet lines
>  and I installed them as soon as we got home. Had a lot of trouble getting
>  the sprayer attachment threaded onto the under-side of the faucet, but
>  Teresa eventually got her hands in there and got it tightened down. New
>  faucet, with a single handle, works fine, of course, the brand new, $108
>  faucet has an itty bitty drip.
>
>  Back down to the basement to lead the attack on the toilet.
>
>  Turns out that the water connection to the tank was pretty clugy. Check
>  this out, step by step:
>
>  Long Copper pipe literally hangs down from the ceiling joists,
>  threaded fitting sweated onto end of Copper pipe,
>  shut-off screwed onto fitting,
>  short, threaded, black iron pipe screwed into shut-off,
>  elbow screwed into black iron,
>  horizontal copper sweated into elbow,
>  elbow sweated into other end of horizontal Copper,
>  Some kind of fitting, possibly compression, bodged onto elbow,
>  finally into tank.
>
>  I managed to get the shut-off replaced with a ball valve without too much
>  trouble. I managed to get the guts of the tank changed with a lot of
>  work, having to cut and tare out some of the old parts. I could not get
>  the funky assembly described above to go back into the new tank 
> connection
>  without leaking rather impressively. So, we are at a draw at the moment,
>  but I intend on replacing most of that assembly with a flexible hose.
>
>  Nearly panicked when in an attempt to identify what branch of my house
>  plumbing has a slow leak, I turned off a shut-off and it proceeded to 
> gush
>  water like a hose. I got the main valve for the house shut and messed
>  around with the shut-off for a while and cranked it open again and it
>  seems to be happy for the time being. I'm starting to contemplate
>  replacing all my shut-offs with ball valves. Replacing everything with
>  PEX actually sounds very good at the moment, although I think Teresa 
> might
>  hang me with the PEX if I attempt a job like that. Certainly not before
>  the deck railings are done.
>
>  I hate plumbing!
>
>  -- 
>  Blue skies.
>  Dan Rossi
>  Carnegie Mellon University.
>  E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  Tel: (412) 268-9081
>
>  [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
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> or
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>
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> http://www.acbradio.org/news/xml/podcast.php?pgm=saturday
>
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