overdriv
Well-known member
Hi folks, been awhile since I've been on the board, life, well you know.
This isn't so much about a garage but could be information needed sometime. I just bought a house that is built on a slab. The house set empty for about a year. I don't think it was winterized properly.
All the plumbing is underground. When it was built, they bedded the copper piping in sand, laid a sheet of 6 mil plastic on the sand and then poured 4" of concrete for the slab. The house is 45 years old but in very good condition. I got it for a good price and planning to sell it to my son and his wife, so it's worth putting some money into.
Where the water supply comes into the utility room, there is a 36" rectangular bricked up hole in the floor. All the main runs, hot and cold, outside bibs, etc begin there. Just 30" into the room on the other side of the wall, there was a leak in the hot water line, which made it impossible to pressurize the system. Water would run back into the utility room and fill the piping vault. It looks like there has been a leak on the same line sometime in the past, as the hot water line from the HWH is newer than all the other lines.
So we cut and jack hammer out a 3'X4' section of the slab out of the dining room which is the room on the other side of the wall from the utility room. We find the lines to be in very good condition except the hot water line and where it was leaking, it appeared to have corroded through the copper pipe in a section about 3" long on the bottom about 30" in from the vault.
The vault wall where that line went into the house had been broken out and a lot of the sand had been washed out into the vault.
I cut all the lines back into the house about 3' and have transitioned them to PEX out into the vault and gotten rid of all the leaky 45YO valves.
My questions to the collective here are;
Why is the hot water line the only line that shows any corrosion, and only in that one section?
My solder joints on the copper to PEX fitting, should they be treated with something or wrapped with something or left alone?
Is there some kind of electrolysis going on with the hot water that would cause it to corrode? As far as I know there has never been an electric WH in the house.
Thanks for any comments.
This isn't so much about a garage but could be information needed sometime. I just bought a house that is built on a slab. The house set empty for about a year. I don't think it was winterized properly.
All the plumbing is underground. When it was built, they bedded the copper piping in sand, laid a sheet of 6 mil plastic on the sand and then poured 4" of concrete for the slab. The house is 45 years old but in very good condition. I got it for a good price and planning to sell it to my son and his wife, so it's worth putting some money into.
Where the water supply comes into the utility room, there is a 36" rectangular bricked up hole in the floor. All the main runs, hot and cold, outside bibs, etc begin there. Just 30" into the room on the other side of the wall, there was a leak in the hot water line, which made it impossible to pressurize the system. Water would run back into the utility room and fill the piping vault. It looks like there has been a leak on the same line sometime in the past, as the hot water line from the HWH is newer than all the other lines.
So we cut and jack hammer out a 3'X4' section of the slab out of the dining room which is the room on the other side of the wall from the utility room. We find the lines to be in very good condition except the hot water line and where it was leaking, it appeared to have corroded through the copper pipe in a section about 3" long on the bottom about 30" in from the vault.
The vault wall where that line went into the house had been broken out and a lot of the sand had been washed out into the vault.
I cut all the lines back into the house about 3' and have transitioned them to PEX out into the vault and gotten rid of all the leaky 45YO valves.
My questions to the collective here are;
Why is the hot water line the only line that shows any corrosion, and only in that one section?
My solder joints on the copper to PEX fitting, should they be treated with something or wrapped with something or left alone?
Is there some kind of electrolysis going on with the hot water that would cause it to corrode? As far as I know there has never been an electric WH in the house.
Thanks for any comments.
