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Smarty Smarty is offline
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Default Gas pipe tightening question from a newbie

Steve,

I used 10 foot pipe sections (sold by Loews and Home Depot) and needed 6 of
them. These alone account for 12 joints (2 per pipe end). I actually have
another 12 or so joints since there are vertical risers at the meter, going
through the foundation to the outdoor generator, and then over to the
generator itself. The total number of joints being prepared will probably
come out to a lot more like 30 or so. I am counting actual joints but I
suspect you may be counting fittings !! (:8

Smarty
"Steve Barker LT" wrote in message
...
I'm just a wonderin' why so many joints in only 65'?

--
Steve Barker




"Smarty" wrote in message
...
At risk of sounding like a total novice (which I am)....I would very much
appreciate guidance regarding tightening gas pipe and connections:

Specifically........if a run of gas pipe is put together, in this case
roughly 65 feet total, with about 15 fittings along the way, and the
finished piping shows leaks in one or more joints once the line is
pressurized, how is tightening best accomplished?

Since rotating a pipe with a wrench to tighten it in a fitting at one end
simultaneously causes the other end of the pipe to now rotate out of the
joint at the other end, perhaps starting a leak there, it seems like
there is no obvious way to tighten a leaking joint without risking
another leak.

The alternative, taking the whole thing apart down to the leaking joint
and then rebuilding the entire remaining run also does not seem a like a
smart or efficient method.

It is tempting to "overtighten" each joint initially, on the theory that
backing off on one connection at a leaking end will still keep the
opposite end of the pipe firmly connected after rotating the pipe. This
may be the correct method, but I have not seen or heard this approach
suggested.

Most of the couplings, elbows, and unions I have seen appear to accept at
least a couple full (360 degree rotations) before they snug up.

I thought about putting unions all over the place so that each segment
could be independently tightened. I have not seen professionals use this
approach, so I am guessing this is not a great solution.....


Thanks in advance for any ideas. I am totally clueless..

Smarty (should be called not so Smarty!)