Kevin C
Well-known member
I'm just getting ready to connect the water feed lines for the garage to the house. That means bringing two lines through the foundation wall.
My question is should I sleeve the copper or not? I read a report that indicates that corrosion is not a problem, the copper can be in direct contact with concrete. I did buy heavy wall copper.
I was thinking of adding a thermal break on the hot water, but at the same time I'm not crazy about taking more concrete out. The lines are in a foam sleeve all the way to the shop.
The largest drill I could find for my deluxe Harbor Freight SSD drill hammer was 1". The 3/4" copper pipe just slides in the hole. I used a chisel to open the hole up a couple of inches in so I can pack it with hydraulic cement.
For the rest of the hole depth through the wall, I could just about fit a layer of heat shrink over the copper. I was thinking as long as I used some urethane adhesive to seal the heat shrink it should be fine.
Mostly, I dont want to open the hole up the entire 8" through the wall.
From what I read, code only requires a sleeve on new construction.
I'm bringing copper six inches away from the wall and connecting to the pex outside the foundation. That seems to be the norm.
My water line coming in is PEX and the plumber connected just outside the foundation. However, he made a pretty large hole in the wall and put a 2" OD thin walled sleeve in the wall to bring the pipe through . Both were then packed with hydraulic cement (the sleeve is still packed with cement, so the copper is still going through cement. Not sure i see the advantage)
I'm thinking i can do a bit neater job than that.
Comments and suggestions?
Thanks,
Kevin
My question is should I sleeve the copper or not? I read a report that indicates that corrosion is not a problem, the copper can be in direct contact with concrete. I did buy heavy wall copper.
I was thinking of adding a thermal break on the hot water, but at the same time I'm not crazy about taking more concrete out. The lines are in a foam sleeve all the way to the shop.
The largest drill I could find for my deluxe Harbor Freight SSD drill hammer was 1". The 3/4" copper pipe just slides in the hole. I used a chisel to open the hole up a couple of inches in so I can pack it with hydraulic cement.
For the rest of the hole depth through the wall, I could just about fit a layer of heat shrink over the copper. I was thinking as long as I used some urethane adhesive to seal the heat shrink it should be fine.
Mostly, I dont want to open the hole up the entire 8" through the wall.
From what I read, code only requires a sleeve on new construction.
I'm bringing copper six inches away from the wall and connecting to the pex outside the foundation. That seems to be the norm.
My water line coming in is PEX and the plumber connected just outside the foundation. However, he made a pretty large hole in the wall and put a 2" OD thin walled sleeve in the wall to bring the pipe through . Both were then packed with hydraulic cement (the sleeve is still packed with cement, so the copper is still going through cement. Not sure i see the advantage)
I'm thinking i can do a bit neater job than that.
Comments and suggestions?
Thanks,
Kevin
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