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Barnabas

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Nov 24, 2013
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361
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Raleigh, NC
I’m guessing that is the gas meter in the center of the picture. and the gas goes into the meter on the yellow line and comes out and goes to the water heater on the silver line. But what is the blue line that appears to also go into and out of the meter?
 

dfiler2

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Dec 15, 2014
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NW Minnesota
It looks like the gas line comes in through the wall directly under the water meter, at least it would be a fairly easy fix to move the water meter to the left side. I am a little confused by what appears to be a flex line on the left.
 

PCustoms

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VT
Left to right:

Red: hot water supply
Dark blue: water main
Blue: cold water supply
Orange: gas

****** routing through a single hole into the utility closet, I'm assuming slab on grade or a crawlspace, but I don't see a glaring issue.

Note: I've never used csst (and likely wont ever).
 

no704

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Looks like they were/are just trying to keep the gas line cool. You know it’s worth a couple Hp!
 

Big Bad Dad

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Southwest/ Central Va.
Inspections are required to just make sure that the stuff being installed has met the MINIMUM standards of the building codes. Stuff can be code compliant and pass inspection. Even if it looks like ****. Which this job does.
 

Walkers

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Cave Creek Az
It looks like the gas line comes in through the wall directly under the water meter, at least it would be a fairly easy fix to move the water meter to the left side. I am a little confused by what appears to be a flex line on the left.
I am guessing that is a CSST gas feed to another appliance located elsewhere. I don’t believe that is a code compliant way to do it, but I was getting out of that portion of the industry and into high pressure regulation about the time CSST was really taking off.
 

PCustoms

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I am guessing that is a CSST gas feed to another appliance located elsewhere. I don’t believe that is a code compliant way to do it, but I was getting out of that portion of the industry and into high pressure regulation about the time CSST was really taking off.
Feed to elsewhere?

That's the supply to the heater....
 
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Two Pump Chump

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N CA
Do the plastic pipes need to be secured to . .. . . .. . .. anything ? Can they just free-stand in space flopping around ?
 

mike93lx

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Richmond, VA
Passed what kind of inspection? One by a private home inspector for the sale? There isn't a pass/fail on that and they have no teeth. Or was it a permit inspection by am AHJ? That's a different story
 

ZRX61

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Solar Blight Valley, SoCal
Friend of mine is in one of the Ca flood zones right now. He got a gas leak between the meter & the house.... 1300ft away. Gas company showed up today, cut his gas off & said "Call us when you find the leak"...
 
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Two Pump Chump

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Passed what kind of inspection? One by a private home inspector for the sale? There isn't a pass/fail on that and they have no teeth. Or was it a permit inspection by am AHJ? That's a different story

Mike that fixture is not in CA but it would absolutely fail a home inspection IF it was not to code or safe. Absolutely. And that would have teeth in CA because the entrained system will not advance a sale on that. This includes the buyer agent or realtor, the financial institution, and the VA loan regs if involved. In other places it seems it is the wild west and no one pays a second thought. I checked my fixture in our 2006 tract home and there are no exposed plastic or PEX (?) tubing at the water heater. If, as stated above, CSST is not allowed to pass through walls or floor, and I would assume governance by National, then local code and the supplying service, then it would fail a home inspection in CA. And that would have to be fixed as a condition of the sale and the loan and all the $$ involved. So money talks in the end. I wasn't at the subject location at the walk through or inspection but if I had been I would have flagged it and stopped the potential sale. So in this thread two differing opinions have been offered. It meets code or it does not. ???
 

PCustoms

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Mike that fixture is not in CA but it would absolutely fail a home inspection IF it was not to code or safe. Absolutely. And that would have teeth in CA because the entrained system will not advance a sale on that. This includes the buyer agent or realtor, the financial institution, and the VA loan regs if involved. In other places it seems it is the wild west and no one pays a second thought. I checked my fixture in our 2006 tract home and there are no exposed plastic or PEX (?) tubing at the water heater. If, as stated above, CSST is not allowed to pass through walls or floor, and I would assume governance by National, then local code and the supplying service, then it would fail a home inspection in CA. And that would have to be fixed as a condition of the sale and the loan and all the $$ involved. So money talks in the end. I wasn't at the subject location at the walk through or inspection but if I had been I would have flagged it and stopped the potential sale. So in this thread two differing opinions have been offered. It meets code or it does not. ???

You posted it.

So does it meet code, or not?


Just because you think it should be done differently doesn't mean it should have been flagged.
 
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Two Pump Chump

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PC, someone else posted it. If it is true, then it doesn't meet code and should have been flagged. I am not a builder, plumber nor do I have the relevant code to read for myself. But there are such qualified people that are members here. And a prospective buyer can request, require anything he wants. Not saying that is recommended or productive but an informed buyer has some teeth. Do you agree with Mike93 ? - thanks
 

mike93lx

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Flagged by whom?

I don't see this stopping a mortgage unless it has special financing terms, like and FHA loan, or it is a required inspection by the AHJ to authorize the sale. A home inspection paid for by a buyer is neither of those
 

Norcal

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Mar 16, 2008
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I refuse to use PEX for anything other then temp installs, and won't use CSST, Gimme copper and black iron pipe.
 

HoosierBuddy

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May 9, 2006
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Southern Indiana
I despise CSST.

I would assume that 90% of DIY CSST installations do not meet National Fuel Code for one of the following 2 reasons.

1. Installer is not trained as required by NFC.
2. CSST is not installed per manufacture's specs.

On 1, you have to at least self train by downloading , reading, and understanding the manufacturer's documentation.

On 2, you have to actually follow their requirements. Electrical bonding back to the main building ground is the one I see most often ignored.

Black Pipe is the way to go. It's been in service for over 100 years and works fine.
 

Zeke

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Aug 13, 2009
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17,176
Location
Long Beach CA, the sewer by the sea.
But it can be run in walls if properly protected??
There is one factor involved, the type of connection allowed in walls. For instance, no unions under the house (that would be the crawl space on an older CA home — we don't have many basements). For that we have to use a LR coupling which suggests only pipe to pipe threaded joints when concealed.

So, since you need a shut off before the CSST and only one CSST per appliance; the answer is still generally no. No shut offs in the wall either.

I see where there are types of CSST that can be used in enclosed spaces. This is not the typical yellow "hook up" that you would use from the wall to the stove, etc. The stuff used elsewhere has a NPT just like black iron pipe. IDT we allow much of this in CA. I could be wrong about that. YMMV.
 

NUTTSGT

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Sep 14, 2009
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Northern Central Ohio
Friend of mine is in one of the Ca flood zones right now. He got a gas leak between the meter & the house.... 1300ft away. Gas company showed up today, cut his gas off & said "Call us when you find the leak"...
Typical around here. Residents are responsible for everything after the meter.
 

housewolf

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Feb 3, 2021
Messages
1,144
Location
East Texas
Thread topic says NG line but the picture has a large portion of the NG line obscured by the water meter. I’d have to see it in its entirety before passing judgement.

Im not versed in every code and local amendment in the US but I don’t see it being okay to use an appliance connector to go through the floor if that’s what I’m looking at.
 

Jay H 237

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Apr 24, 2005
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1,994
Location
Torrington, CT
There's nothing I see there that would fail an inspection, especially the gas line. The water lines look like Ray Charles with help from Helen Keller installed them and I don't like the way they are but still not an absolute fail point. I see plenty of room for improvement though.
 

firebirdparts

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Jun 8, 2016
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Location
Kingsport, TN
Friend of mine is in one of the Ca flood zones right now. He got a gas leak between the meter & the house.... 1300ft away. Gas company showed up today, cut his gas off & said "Call us when you find the leak"...
Good to hear there's somebody competent still working. that's what they're supposed to do.
 
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