Greetings all:
This is about how to cap the location of the new-to-old junction of a new gas line for the pressure test, in a way that will allow final connection after the pressure test. I looked but didn't find the answer to this question in old threads.
I'm adding new natural gas plumbing to a small gas fireplace. The line will run from an existing, capped-off 1/2 inch stub in the attic (I'm not sure what the stubbed-off piece was for, but it's there, and it's not a drip leg or the like), to the shutoff valve by the appliance. The work is permitted, and straightforward, but there's one detail that I haven't finalized about the pressure test.
There's no way that I'm going to pressure test the whole house of decades-old gas plumbing, and local procedures explicitly allow me to pressure test only the new plumbing, and leak-test the connection to the old, after final connection, with a bubble test.
So I'm planning to put the pressure test at the appliance end of things (no valve, just pressure test assembly) and cap the other end of the new plumbing, in the attic. It's NOT going to be concealed, so I think I'm OK leaving the new line capped a few inches from the existing old cap, then planning to make the final, post-pressure test connection with a right-and-left coupling and ******. I'm confident that this is code-compliant and logical, but I'm wondering if there's some other, standard way that plumbers do it that will give the local plumbing inspector that cozy feeling that things have been done the standard way.
This is in California. A union is definitely not allowed, of course.
Thanks for any advice that you can offer.
This is about how to cap the location of the new-to-old junction of a new gas line for the pressure test, in a way that will allow final connection after the pressure test. I looked but didn't find the answer to this question in old threads.
I'm adding new natural gas plumbing to a small gas fireplace. The line will run from an existing, capped-off 1/2 inch stub in the attic (I'm not sure what the stubbed-off piece was for, but it's there, and it's not a drip leg or the like), to the shutoff valve by the appliance. The work is permitted, and straightforward, but there's one detail that I haven't finalized about the pressure test.
There's no way that I'm going to pressure test the whole house of decades-old gas plumbing, and local procedures explicitly allow me to pressure test only the new plumbing, and leak-test the connection to the old, after final connection, with a bubble test.
So I'm planning to put the pressure test at the appliance end of things (no valve, just pressure test assembly) and cap the other end of the new plumbing, in the attic. It's NOT going to be concealed, so I think I'm OK leaving the new line capped a few inches from the existing old cap, then planning to make the final, post-pressure test connection with a right-and-left coupling and ******. I'm confident that this is code-compliant and logical, but I'm wondering if there's some other, standard way that plumbers do it that will give the local plumbing inspector that cozy feeling that things have been done the standard way.
This is in California. A union is definitely not allowed, of course.
Thanks for any advice that you can offer.
