Hi Nancy. There is no good reason to go to plastic plumbing in this situation.
First thing to discover is if there is a shut-off valve for the hot and another for the cold water lines to the taps. If so you should be able to simply disconnect the tails from the under side of the tap. If you are replacing the taps the new ones may not use the same sized fitting but if they do you are all set. If there is no shut-off or if it is then soldered directly to the taps which used to be common then I would shut off the water to the house, cut the copper pipes off just below the old shut-offs and terminate the pipes with shut-off valves also known as stop cocks with compression fittings. You then buy tails, I like the braded hose style, one end threads onto the end of the stop cock and the other has a nut arrangement to thread over the fitting at the stem of the tap. Because the tails are flexible life is very easy. The other advantage is much fewer joins. Hope this is helpful. ----- Original Message ----- From: Nancy Hill To: [email protected] Sent: Sunday, October 18, 2009 1:31 PM Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Help with kitchen plumbing needed Hi All, We need to replace the kitchen sink fixture. My husband has done that before when pvc pipe was involved. Under this sink is copper pipe for the hot and cold water. How do you attach pvc pipe to copper pipe to make a good seal and the pvc will be what actually attaches to the fixture? Many thanks for your suggestions and help. Nancy [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
