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#1
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oily taste in galvanized pipe. How to best remove it?
I put a drinking fountain on the end of a 4' prethreaded galvanized pipe
from Home Depot. I used the galvanized so that it would stand up on its own in the yard. The 4' galvanized pipe is fed with PVC. The water from the drinking fountain head continues to taste oily even though I've flushed it with several minutes of water. I'm pretty sure that the oily taste is from oil in the pipe when I bought it at HD. I think it gets the oil in in from cutting the threads in on each end of the pipe. What should I do to remove the oily taste from the pipe? It seems like disassembling it and putting some kind of bottle brush and soap would be quite an effort. There must be better way. How would a plumber do it? Thanks. -- David Jensen Change the xx in my email address to MJ for my real email address. Thanks. |
#2
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David Jensen wrote:
.... ...How would a plumber do it? Woulda' done it first, if at all. Let it run, it'll eventually go away as there's no practical way once it's installed. I suppose you could take the faucet/fixture off the top and use a stiff rod w/ some scrubbing arrangement, but I'd not bother... |
#3
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"David Jensen" wrote in message nk.net... I put a drinking fountain on the end of a 4' prethreaded galvanized pipe from Home Depot. I used the galvanized so that it would stand up on its own in the yard. The 4' galvanized pipe is fed with PVC. The water from the drinking fountain head continues to taste oily even though I've flushed it with several minutes of water. I'm pretty sure that the oily taste is from oil in the pipe when I bought it at HD. I think it gets the oil in in from cutting the threads in on each end of the pipe. What should I do to remove the oily taste from the pipe? It seems like disassembling it and putting some kind of bottle brush and soap would be quite an effort. There must be better way. How would a plumber do it? Thanks. -- David Jensen Change the xx in my email address to MJ for my real email address. Thanks. let the water run . Like mentioned take it apart and clean it. If you go that far order a piece of stainless steel pipe or Type K cooper. |
#4
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-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1 On Tue, 26 Jul 2005 16:07:47 GMT, "David Jensen" wrote: What should I do to remove the oily taste from the pipe? It'll go away in a few months. ;- -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: PGP 7.1 iQA/AwUBQuZt/AIk7T39FC4ZEQKC7gCfURnCbrGxAiH7P+Xnv/TbLIxSxngAn0gn 37Cseqf4PZM0yOMngg8BhEFk =W+U6 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- -john wide-open at throttle dot info |
#5
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"David Jensen" wrote in message What should I do to remove the oily taste from the pipe? It seems like disassembling it and putting some kind of bottle brush and soap would be quite an effort. There must be better way. How would a plumber do it? Thanks. He'd disassemble it and put some kind of bottle brush and soap in it. Aside from letting the water run for a long time, there really is no other solution. It will eventually go away but could take many gallons of water. |
#6
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David Jensen wrote:
I put a drinking fountain on the end of a 4' prethreaded galvanized pipe from Home Depot. I used the galvanized so that it would stand up on its own in the yard. The 4' galvanized pipe is fed with PVC. The water from the drinking fountain head continues to taste oily even though I've flushed it with several minutes of water. I'm pretty sure that the oily taste is from oil in the pipe when I bought it at HD. I think it gets the oil in in from cutting the threads in on each end of the pipe. What should I do to remove the oily taste from the pipe? It seems like disassembling it and putting some kind of bottle brush and soap would be quite an effort. There must be better way. How would a plumber do it? Thanks. I replaced some pipe to my sink for the hard (drinking) water outlet, using galvanized pipe from HD. Chinese import. The water that would stand in the pipe overnight always, always smelled and tasted horrible. Very strong smell & taste. I pulled the length of pipe (2 feet, I think) and scrubbed it with a shotgun cleaning brush and some dish soap. Rinsed thoroughly. Reinstalled. No help. After two months, I gave up and replaced the galvanized with PVC. I realize the PVC isn't an option for you, but perhaps a different source for your galvanized or iron pipe would do it. I had never had problems like this with galvanized before. |
#7
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clipped
After two months, I gave up and replaced the galvanized with PVC. I realize the PVC isn't an option for you, but perhaps a different source for your galvanized or iron pipe would do it. I had never had problems like this with galvanized before. It may be wise for the OP to replace the galvanized and everything beyond it, as the oil will have coated what it touched on it's way out. Yuck. Given that it could be coated with waste oil, it may not be the healthiest stuff to ingest. |
#8
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Cutting oil is an acquired taste. Be patient and experiment with various
foods until you find some that go well with the oil. "David Jensen" wrote in message nk.net... I put a drinking fountain on the end of a 4' prethreaded galvanized pipe from Home Depot. I used the galvanized so that it would stand up on its own in the yard. The 4' galvanized pipe is fed with PVC. The water from the drinking fountain head continues to taste oily even though I've flushed it with several minutes of water. I'm pretty sure that the oily taste is from oil in the pipe when I bought it at HD. I think it gets the oil in in from cutting the threads in on each end of the pipe. What should I do to remove the oily taste from the pipe? It seems like disassembling it and putting some kind of bottle brush and soap would be quite an effort. There must be better way. How would a plumber do it? Thanks. -- David Jensen Change the xx in my email address to MJ for my real email address. Thanks. |
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