When to NOT use sharkbite? A question
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To be fair I'm sure you've brazed stuff in areas people couldn't even get their hands in to fit a shark bite.
Are you a turbo torch guy or oxyacetylene?
Single pipe 392sqft system with an EG-40 rated for 325sqft and it's silent and balanced at all times.
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are they whitewood? you have to do some math if they're some other species, especially hardwood species
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They're red cedar.
They're 24" oc over a 16' span.
They're grossly under modern code and there's no excuse that'll help them. :)
Single pipe 392sqft system with an EG-40 rated for 325sqft and it's silent and balanced at all times.
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No. I believe codes and rules should be followed permits as well.
My problem is the manufacturer seem to have taken over some of the code making panels by there influence and the code making panels are bending to what the mfg wants.
Some of the equipment they are approving is junk IMHO
I never liked CSST since it first came out. The mechanical construction is very flimesy at best. It is about the same construction a electrical seal tight.
The few times I used it were for temporary work to fire up some temp heating units. The inside of it is like tin foil. I just think gas is too hazerdous to use something that can be so easily damaged. MA approved its use then took it out of use after the bonding/lighting strike incidents. After discussing it with the MFGs they let it back in. I wish they didn't do that.
As far as the whole AFCI/combination breaker thing it is the same issue. Maybe in time the MFGs will get it worked out. I follow a lot of the electrical forums. Most electricians absolutely hate the thing and are sick and tired of call backs they can't charge for and do not want the things in there own house. Building a new house requires almost every circuit to have arc fault. The MFGs pushed this on the code panels saying how many lives would be saved due to arcing faults. This was never proven. The failure rates are very high and at $60 + dollars for a single pole breaker they are expensive. They want them on electric stoves outside condensing units etc.
This didn't happen years ago. Things were thought through and products really tested before they were forced on the market. Now they bring things to market that are not ready. Are the code makers paid off from kick backs??
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I can see that.
And I agree.
Single pipe 392sqft system with an EG-40 rated for 325sqft and it's silent and balanced at all times.
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Agree on the AFCI breakers. I'm all for building codes, many of which evolved from the hard lessons learned when people got killed. But the modern world seemed pretty safe with pre-AFCI breakers. Then we had to upgrade to AFCI's when we had a new panel installed. I've had to replace a number of them in the house with standard breakers because they trip so easily on window air conditioners and vacuum cleaner motors.
But I am glad SharkBites are allowed. I replaced my hose bibs last year with frost-proof faucets. Normally I do sweat my own pipes, but in this case one of the old 1/2" copper supply lines was pitched up as it approached the hose bib, and also ran tight alongside a 100-year-old timber beam. But the new frost-proof faucet had to be pitched slightly down to drain, making an angle mismatch and also a vertical offset with the 1/2" supply. A SharkBite and a short piece of PEX bent to span the angle mismatch and the offset made short work of what otherwise would have been a pain.
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i have 2 afci breakers that were installed about 20 years ago that only tripped when i had an issue with an hf antenna that was putting a lot of rf in to the wiring. I have a combination afci/gfci that trips at some point when the power goes out and comes back on. Maybe it is because the primaries in my neighborhood are an ancient ungrounded 3 phase system.
there is the opposite problem too where the manufacturers lobbied to try to stop a new rule instead of figuring out how to make their product work under the new requirements. We saw that with low water consumption toilets. the first by us manufacturers weren't designed to work under the new rules and worked poorly. Now there are lots of options that work well.
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You can't flare it or use a compression fitting because you cannot get ANY tools though a 1.5" opening.
You can't preassemble it because you cannot make the 90 degree turn under the floor.
Pex would have worked but I did not have any pex adaptors or tools for it.
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Ive used both
The last several years Turbo.
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how did you cut it beyond this theoretical hole? sounds pretty contrived and like you got here because you didn't think ahead.
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The floor has a ton of bounce in it. I'm sure if I tried I could snap a joist.
Single pipe 392sqft system with an EG-40 rated for 325sqft and it's silent and balanced at all times.
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my old house had same conditions; even the dog trotting across flow would get thing bouncing. Sistered all the second level joist as part of full renovation and added layered 2x4 beams and screw post at strategic locations to address first level bounce.
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One of the complaints people complain a lot about lately is putting electric stoves on AFCI/GFCI as is now required. You wire it up and the HO moves in and while Christmas dinner is in the oven the stove trips. What many have found is to take the AFCI out and put in a regular breaker. Let the stove run for a few weeks to burn off the elements and then go back to the AFCI.
But its just more crap you shouldn't have to go through. Not the HO fault, not the electricians fault but there the ones that pay. Not the code panel or the mfg. who could care less.
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LRCC...Bro...how did I get it done??? The A-1 Mini torch tip...Ive used tiny Butane model torches to keep flame very focused. Till this day, I've never used a Sharkbite for a repair...I've prefabbed pieces, used a brass compression fitting at times...never used the "bread trick" either. Have I blackened a few floor joists? Sure, I always get it done, Professionally and safe. Never used a Fernco Clamp either. I've never lit a house on fire either..never had an insurance claim through my businesses..
Priorities to me:
- Do the highest qaulity, Professional repair/installation possible. No half assing it or DIYer, Rube Goldberg gimmicks. Anyone can do mickey.mouse repairs...
- Making a profit.
Not the wisest businesses model, but it ain't about $$$ to me...I do.alright..and I get tremendous gratification out of holding to these extremely high standards I set for myself. Mad Dog
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"I get tremendous gratification out of holding to these extremely high standards I set for myself. Mad Dog"
And this is exactly what's missing all across America today.
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@EBEBRATT-Ed When I was renovating and adding to my home I approached my electrician about those combo breakers. Before I could finish talking he interrupted and said I will put them in and then take them out after inspection. A bold statement but I was very happy that he did this simply because I new that the things are s**t. I have never heard so many electricians talk about how awful these things are. The complaints were almost as bad as the "Federal" breakers complaints I had heard in the past.
As to CSST. I did install it in my home. I have installed it in other places. Installed it above and beyond the code requirements and, followed the manufacturers directions. I had less concerns about it because I have installed a lot of it and have seen miles of the stuff in working order before I tried it out. It's not as thin walled as you might describe. However, I did cringe when I saw a brand being offered directly to consumers in the big box hardware stores. Offering it there…not a good idea.
As to shark bites. They have there place. I would not use them as a go to fitting, but they have been succeeding in the market for many years now.
As usual Ed I agree with much of what you say.
And @JayPoorJay When not to use them? It's your call.
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I've used shark bites. I had one temporarily in my own home for a bit. I also have some at work in the shop.
I feel I can do a pretty good sweat joint and I'm decent at brazing. I get nervous when I'm brazing larger tubing next to sensitive things though.
I did Uponor PEX in my own house because I really like the system and felt it was the best bet when it comes to longevity especially with complaints about alleged copper quality.
Single pipe 392sqft system with an EG-40 rated for 325sqft and it's silent and balanced at all times.
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I don't see why anything about the elements would cause it to trip until they fail and short to ground. i suppose the afci will make it harder to diagnose because of the lack of fireball when they do fail. the thing that really does scare me is baseboard and space heaters with calrod (or even open wire) elements, it seems like the fireball when those short could easily set something nearby on fire.
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My licensed electrician hates them. Constant nuisance trips...Passes inspections replaces them all...mad Dog
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Here’s where we’re all on the same page 😅
Apparently they are known to be problematic with car chargers and sure enough, mine would blow immediately on plugging in my car. I had to run to HD and get a regular 30A breaker.
Apparently if I had asked for it to be hard wired, code would have ok with a regular breaker, but I wanted a nice 240 plug at the back of the house.
NJ Steam Homeowner.
Free NJ and remote steam advice: https://heatinghelp.com/find-a-contractor/detail/new-jersey-steam-help/
See my sight glass boiler videos: https://bit.ly/3sZW1el0 -
That's my complaint about the breaker . The mfgs have been shoving this stuff down our throat for years and it doesn't work.
I heard someone made a code proposal to have them taken out of the code…not likely that would ever pass.
The MFGs make big money on this stuff. Not properly tested. Its a joke.
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On a mostly theoretical basis (I only have two panels, out of seven, in Cedric's home that have circuit breakers — the rest are fuses!) I can see why AFCIs might be problematic. The question is, what is a dangerous arc vs. what is a perfectly normal arc on a switch transient (almost all switches have a transient arc either on opening or closing)? The argument for them is plausible — I've had a few situations in light fixtures where insulation has degraded and there has been low power arcing which it would have been nice to know about — but creating a breaker which trips reliably but isn't subject to nuisance tripping… hmm.
Br. Jamie, osb
Building superintendent/caretaker, 7200 sq. ft. historic house museum with dependencies in New England0 -
Before my electrician replaced the Arc Fault breakers we would get nuisance tripping several times a week. Ain't had one since..mad Dog
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Taking out the arc faults is great until somethings happens. They should be removed from the code until they are perfected.
What if you pull out your arc faults and heaven forbid you have a fire? Then the Ins Co refuses to cover because the arc faults are gone
That why they need to be pulled from the code.
But you know the code making panels are to ego driven to go backwards.
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I bet some brands of cadfci are much better than others. 20+ years is a long time to have not figured it out if you were trying.
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Id also ask how much power do they consume and how much of a fire hazard are they themselves.
Single pipe 392sqft system with an EG-40 rated for 325sqft and it's silent and balanced at all times.
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