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My first try with copper pipe

rjprice

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Jan 5, 2006
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64
Location
tx
Appreciate any feedback on my first copper pipe job.

I am putting a hose reel on my lean-to. Connecting the reel to the pipe with 3/8 barbed fittings. I wanted to but a shut off on the reel because its a leaker. 3/8 hose with 3/8 ends and 3/8 I/M fittings. Last pic is the drain.
 

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matt_i

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Mar 14, 2008
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SE Michigan
You will know very fast about your quality of solder joint when you turn on the water :)

Getting it all drained dry again when you have a pinhole is the incentive to perfect your technique so you don't have to go back. Especially when working in dark basements with buckets lol.

Good job not roasting the paint off the steel column :thumbup:
 

johninct

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Dec 21, 2010
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Good Job!!! You did it correct with the top of the pipe too (Up then down).
 

MattT

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Feb 20, 2010
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Just an FYI, you can buy "street or fitting" elbows. one end slips into a fitting. saves cutting a short pc of pipe

Street 45*s would've worked well for those ball valve offsets. Better flow & probably look a little better too. Not that there's anything wrong with the OPs design, or workmanship. Looks good for a first attempt:thumbup:
 

sberry

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Jun 18, 2005
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Brethren, Michigan
2 things. Street fittings cost more than simple elbow and couplings. Second, reduce numbers, you don't got to use every fitting they ever invent, straight is good. The finish is nice, you do good but simplify.
 

ard

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Feb 16, 2015
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Sierra Foothills... California
Looks good, but I would have kept the pipe 'protected' in the space of the I beam- not have it out in the air for something to hit it. If you needed a few mm for the valve, space the mounts out with a polyethylene block or whatever.... just me.
 
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johnnyradiant

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Mar 27, 2017
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Vancouver, BC
To simplify the drain you could have come down with the pipe and put a street 22.5° and then the ball valve. It would have kicked the discharge out away from the base of the post and kicked out the valve body away from the post as well keeping everything in tight.

Looks good and I'm not sure how many suppliers you would have had to visit to find a street 22.5°. I don't think my local branches would have had any.
 
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sberry

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See how m much juice comes down it. I get so little down that don't even have drains on them except for the filter.
 

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machsnell

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Jun 12, 2010
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942
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Northern Virginia
Nice work especially for first time! Just when I think I can solder I get sloppy and have to sand down solder inside a fitting to redo.

Also- you can tell a plumber didnt do it because there arent holes in the I beams for the pipes....haha.

sorry plumbers too many years hearing carpenters butch about holes cut in floor joists for sanitary and water lines.

Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk
 

HotrodHR

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Nov 22, 2009
Messages
445
Location
North Alabama
Plumbed my shop with copper for my airlines used sharkbite fittings instead of soldering. Looks good and works... cost more than soldering though.
 

johnnyradiant

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Mar 27, 2017
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Vancouver, BC
If designers and framers would sweat the details before placing stuff in the way then the plumbers wouldn't have to make as many ugly anything but square or round holes. It's a 2-way street. ;)

Copper and sharkbites costs way more than PVC and glue.
 

Wingrider72

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Jun 25, 2019
Messages
10
Location
Southeast TX
Nice work, especially for first time. I'm a commercial plumber by trade and we have apprentices with several years of training that can't solder that well. I'm interested to know what the fasteners are that you used to secure the two-hole straps to the columns.
 
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rjprice

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Jan 5, 2006
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Location
tx
Nice work, especially for first time. I'm a commercial plumber by trade and we have apprentices with several years of training that can't solder that well. I'm interested to know what the fasteners are that you used to secure the two-hole straps to the columns.

I used 3/4" self drilling screws. However, the center of the I-beam was too thick for the screws to drill through so I marked each hole and pre-drilled with a drill bit. I used rubber hose to insulate the copper from the steel and used conduit straps to secure to the beam.
 
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