I'm about to install a gas line for an outdoor grill. There are two options for where and how to join it to the central gas line, and I'm looking for advice on which is better.
The gas line enters the building at one corner, runs along the closest floor joist until it reaches the middle of the main building, then does this:
My original plan was just to take apart the 1/2" line to the kitchen and replace an elbow with a tee further along, but that turns out not to be possible because of clearance with the electrical panel.
So option 1 is to cut out the ****** in that picture, replace the bottom elbow with a tee (or better, a side outlet elbow), and run 1/2" line to the service point. This would be about a 35' run to the grill connection. This is a shorter run than my other option, but it requires me to put a union where that ****** is now, and I'm not sure that's a good idea; it looks like that union would be stressed.
Option 2: About 2/3 of the way down that central line, there is a capped reducing tee, 1" to 1/2". There's a clearance problem with an HVAC duct but I'm pretty sure I can move that out of the way. No unions necessary, just uncap it and start piping, but it will be a significantly longer run that way, about 48' all told.
What would you do? Stick a union in the main line as in option 1, to keep the new run shorter? Or just hook up to the existing tee?
The gas line enters the building at one corner, runs along the closest floor joist until it reaches the middle of the main building, then does this:
My original plan was just to take apart the 1/2" line to the kitchen and replace an elbow with a tee further along, but that turns out not to be possible because of clearance with the electrical panel.
So option 1 is to cut out the ****** in that picture, replace the bottom elbow with a tee (or better, a side outlet elbow), and run 1/2" line to the service point. This would be about a 35' run to the grill connection. This is a shorter run than my other option, but it requires me to put a union where that ****** is now, and I'm not sure that's a good idea; it looks like that union would be stressed.
Option 2: About 2/3 of the way down that central line, there is a capped reducing tee, 1" to 1/2". There's a clearance problem with an HVAC duct but I'm pretty sure I can move that out of the way. No unions necessary, just uncap it and start piping, but it will be a significantly longer run that way, about 48' all told.
What would you do? Stick a union in the main line as in option 1, to keep the new run shorter? Or just hook up to the existing tee?
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