To put this thread in closing,though......will the current new generation of tradesman know how to torch down the line, or will the -new defacto- be press as the standard with all the dog-chewed up lines as the new norm when you walk into a boiler room
I was watching this youtube video - gent likes to use the press tool. I saw one repair on a coupler, but the fitting he used at the end of the day was not a proper die-electric break. Or this same youtube plumber, showing a buried copper repair, but he used hard copper to repair the break.
Will the mentality be without further knowledge, if you can press it and it don't leak, good enough...
I understand the value of it, for situations where lines are dripping and one can knock out a repair....but I guess call me a dinosaur. I still want soldered/threaded connections on the pipework. And no solvent/glue for me. I'll take no-hub anyday
I watched one video where the "plumber" repaired a leaking galvanized steel line with a stainless steel press fitting.
This is one instance where a press type tool would be invaluable. Difficult access, no soldering anywhere in an old home, no worries about those drips that don't stop.
However, the fitting used is NOT APPROVED for the manner in which it was used. I researched this particular application because it would have made a job much easier, and I found that no one makes a press fitting to go from galvanized pipe to copper.
This person used a stainless steel press fitting intended to join stainless steel pipe together. No dielectric properties, not approved to press onto galvanized pipe.
Yes, there are press dielectric unions, but the galvanized end is threaded and the press end is copper.
I wanted to cut the galvanized pipe in a good location, and simply press on a starting point for copper pipe without chasing it back to a threaded joint. Nope- at least not in an approved manner.
I am guessing that the possible variability of the galvanized coating on the pipe exterior is the problem.
The average homeowner isn't going to buy one of these tools.
However, it further opens the door for so-called professionals to do stuff wrong.
One interesting side benefit of the press fittings is that it forces you to use long radius fittings. Another is that the fittings are thicker copper. Either of these is more good than bad.
Unfortunately, there is no way around the significant investment in tooling and fittings to have a decent inventory of "emergency fittings" to do a repair job. In my area, only Menards stocks press fittings in a limited selection (besides a plumbing or some HVAC supply houses).