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Underground water line

cobragrover

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Nov 15, 2010
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30
I'm not sure which sub-forum this should go in so feel free to move if you like.

What is the best underground water pipe to run from cistern to house or garage? I think the choices are regular pvc pipe in schedule 40 or 80 or the coiled HDPE pipe. This is cistern only, no well water available. This is in southern Indiana if that matters.

Thanks
 
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kbs2244

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Nov 11, 2006
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What kind of pressure?
S 80 is way over kill for most residential applications.
The coiled black stuff will hold up to most water pumps pressures.
Go oversized for good flow if it is over 50 feet end to end.
 

MagKarl

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Oct 15, 2012
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684
Location
Olympia, WA
Pros and cons to both. The poly line fittings are expensive but the tubing itself is pretty durable. PVC is easy to work with but the fittings are more brittle in my opinion. I used 20' belled PVC for my well line.
 

SJR033

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Portage, Michigan
Either will work fine. If it was me, I would use HDPE. Just for the simple reason of no joints. Every joint is a failure point and no joints is a big plus. What ever you go with, please include a tracer wire for future locating.
 

joe_padavano

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Feb 26, 2011
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Northern VA
Why reinvent this? The coiled black poly pipe is DESIGNED for this application for wells. You can get it anywhere. Fittings are not expensive. I've run lots of this to remote hydrants on the farm. Just do it.

3151672
 

Majordisorder

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Jan 5, 2014
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234
Location
North Idaho
You didn't mention what type of terrain you were in. If rocky, you may want to bring in sand to bed pvc in, or just use 160 or even 200 psi poly and cover by hand first. Machine backfilling over bare pipe can be risky.
 
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Handyfarmer

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Dec 20, 2014
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in the high plains of Colorado
the poly pipe comes in approved for potable water NSF and non approved, (used for sprinklers), use the approved, NSF,



Poly pipe (the black coils) if the soil is rocky they can spring leaks via the rocks against them, (I have not had this problem but a neighbor has,)

PEX,

PVC

Copper

Steel

on the farm I have about 1/2 mile of pvc to tanks in the pasture, ( pushing 25-30 years no problems)
and have 1/2 + mile of Polly pipe to tanks and from a windmill (1998 or 99 put that in no problems)
and have some old very old steel lines int he yard (close to 100= years old), I will be replacing them with either poly or PEX here hopefully be failure in the next year,
 
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SJR033

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Location
Portage, Michigan
HDPE (poly pipe) comes in many different types. CTS, IPS, SIDR. Any that are NSF potable water will work. Each type, requires it own type of fitting. We typically only sell the CTS because a copper sized compression fitting will work on it. But use what you have available. I recommend that you keep a piece of the pipe that has the stampings, telling you what type & size the pipe is. Sometime down the road that line will break or be cut or need to be spliced into and having the original piece with the type, will let you get the correct fittings.
 

OldracerJones

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Jan 20, 2012
Messages
334
Location
Chico, Texas
I use the HDPE for all long runs underground. Last year the lake level was down and I had to chase water 280 feet. I used this pipe and on e the lake filled back up I just rolled the pipe up and stored it. All of my hose pipes are underground with this. The main difference between the two over the years has been the HDPE will usually
Rack at the fittings due to hose clamp failures. The PVC will crack, usually underground, and can be affected by roots.
 

cowboy73

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Feb 13, 2010
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2,609
Location
southern Indiana
My parents, who also live in southern Indiana, just had a new well drilled. SCH 80 PVC was used, as was their previous well. In the past, dad used the black roil of plastic pipe, He had leaks and had to replace the run once in about 20 years! 1000' of pipe!!!! No leaks whatsoever with the PVC though for almost 16 years.... The new well was needed because a spring opened up and was running through a vein of coal that was contaminating the water.
 

csp

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Location
Franktown, CO
In the past, dad used the black roil of plastic pipe, He had leaks and had to replace the run once in about 20 years!

Without knowing what PSI that black plastic pipe was, that's not saying much. HDPE isn't the same as it was 20+ years ago either.
 

Handyfarmer

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Dec 20, 2014
Messages
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Location
in the high plains of Colorado
most likely it will all need replaced at some point, I think most modern pipe if properly used, installed, should last 50 plus years,

there are grades, and psi, rating and even in some instances grades, for under ground and other uses,

as said the poly I have has done me well, except when I caught it with the back hoe, but then the steel was tore up as well,

I have seen PVC split (I personally have not had any problems),

I do think from time to time one gets a bad batch of pipe, regardless of the material and failure will occur sooner than it should,
 
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joe_padavano

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Location
Northern VA
In the past, dad used the black roil of plastic pipe, He had leaks and had to replace the run once in about 20 years! 1000' of pipe!!!! No leaks whatsoever with the PVC though for almost 16 years....

So the old pipe lasted 20 years and the PVC is better because it has lasted only 16 years so far? I'm struggling with that logic (as well as other factors on what exactly caused the original failure, like not setting the pipe in sand or stone dust).

:headscrat
 
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