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Don & Lucille Don & Lucille is offline
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Default Mortar is the natural enemy of pipes

Any pipes going through cement shold be place in a sleeve. IE: a larger pipe
"HeyBub" wrote in message
m...
In upgrading an outside faucet, I twisted the pipe holding the faucet into
a shattered mess! WTF?

The 1/2" galvanized pipe exits the plumbing supply through a brick wall
and the pipe exit was packed in with brick mortar.

So I chiseled out about six bricks to get to the junction of the output
pipe. Damn! The 10" galvanized iron pipe was in excellent shape except
where it passed through the mortar. Even in the area that was covered with
mortar, the pipe's interior was in good shape. The corrosion was taking
place from the outside inward.

It seems as if the mortar was eating the pipe. Bother!

About 200 cursewords later, I had the 10" access pipe replaced and turned
the water back on. (It ain't easy getting a pipe wrench inside a wall.).

I noticed a teeny bit of moisture at another, nearby, faucet access pipe!

I carefully chiseled out the mortar surrounding THIS pipe and it started
spewing like a beer can in the sun; same thing as the previous pipe. This
pipe, as it passed through the mortar, was nothing but a thin layer of
rust. Another 200-curseword job!

Anyway, the new pipes are now covered with a 1/4"-thick plastic tunnel as
they pass through the brick veneer.

What I learned:
1. Mortar attacks galvanized pipes.
2. Pipes imbedded in mortar should be checked every 30 years and replaced
if necessary.