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Marilyn & Bob Marilyn & Bob is offline
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Default Stopping a SLOW Seepage Leak at Pipe Joint

wrote in message
oups.com...

wrote:
I had a new hot water heater installed yesterday with a auto-shutoff
valve for the water heater installed on the cold water piping. The
valve had a female threaded end for the incoming water and a mail
threaded end for the exiting water of the valve. The plumber had to
cut the cold water pipe back to make room and then he soldered on the
proper threaded pipe ends to that he could connect the valve to the
pipe. The end where the water goes in is fine but the other end has a
very very slow seepage leak. It is so slow that it barely creates a
water bead and when it does drip, the water droplet dries before
another one has a chance to drop.

Since the valve is now threaded on both ends with peices of soldered
piping, I can't remove it to check the seal created by the teflon tape
on the threads. Is there anyway to stop the leaking while it is in its
stationary position on the pipe? Will the mineral deposits from the
water seal the slow seepage on its own (I Have seen this occur on other
types of copper piping thread joints) ?



And ... that's why you want a pipe-union in both lines at the heater.

J



Since so far everyone has told you it's not a big deal, I'd feel confident
in calling the plumber and asking his opinion. Can't hurt. And if he says
don't worry about it, you might just want to send him a note confirming your
conversation if the leak gets worse instead of self healing from the mineral
deposits.
--
Peace,
BobJ