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[email protected] June 8th 06 06:09 PM

use compression or solder?
 
Hi,

I am wondering how "safe and effective" is to use compression method
instead of soldering for joint of copper pipe and fittings? I am not
comfortable with soldering, but not sure using compression is
"water-tight enough" for joint or not, thx.


Ralph Mowery June 8th 06 06:21 PM

use compression or solder?
 

wrote in message
oups.com...
Hi,

I am wondering how "safe and effective" is to use compression method
instead of soldering for joint of copper pipe and fittings? I am not
comfortable with soldering, but not sure using compression is
"water-tight enough" for joint or not, thx.


If done correctly the compression fittings are just as good as the soldered
connections. I work in a very large plant and we have thousands to millions
of copper and stainless steel connections using the compression fittings.
Anywhere from a few pounds of air to several hundred psi of various
chemicals.



Edwin Pawlowski June 8th 06 06:27 PM

use compression or solder?
 

wrote in message
oups.com...
Hi,

I am wondering how "safe and effective" is to use compression method
instead of soldering for joint of copper pipe and fittings? I am not
comfortable with soldering, but not sure using compression is
"water-tight enough" for joint or not, thx.


I'm a fan of solder, but compression has a place. Mostly used for attaching
faucets and toilets to the main line. If I was plumbing a new house today,
I'd use Pex tubing.



Robert Allison June 8th 06 07:40 PM

use compression or solder?
 
wrote:

Hi,

I am wondering how "safe and effective" is to use compression method
instead of soldering for joint of copper pipe and fittings? I am not
comfortable with soldering, but not sure using compression is
"water-tight enough" for joint or not, thx.


Due to the propensity of compression fittings to fail, I only
use compression fittings where they will be visible. Solder
for everything that will be concealed.

Compression fittings can last for years and mostly they do
last, but they are much more likely to fail over time than
soldered joints.

--
Robert Allison
Rimshot, Inc.
Georgetown, TX

PipeDown June 8th 06 08:53 PM

use compression or solder?
 
For the most part (in typical residential plumbing) hard copper pipe is
soldered except for a few things like supply valves at sinks, After that
they are useful for repair but I wouldn't use them in a new setup if only
for the vastly higher price per connection. Soft copper tubing usually uses
compression fittings.

Besides do they even have compression fittings for elbows, tees, 45s, caps.
One great advantage for repair is that they can actually be connected
without shutting off the water (yeah, its messy and you probably need to
open a faucet to keep the pressure low) or completely draining the pipe.



wrote in message
oups.com...
Hi,

I am wondering how "safe and effective" is to use compression method
instead of soldering for joint of copper pipe and fittings? I am not
comfortable with soldering, but not sure using compression is
"water-tight enough" for joint or not, thx.




[email protected] June 8th 06 09:41 PM

use compression or solder?
 

PipeDown wrote:
For the most part (in typical residential plumbing) hard copper pipe is
soldered except for a few things like supply valves at sinks, After that
they are useful for repair but I wouldn't use them in a new setup if only
for the vastly higher price per connection. Soft copper tubing usually uses
compression fittings.

Besides do they even have compression fittings for elbows, tees, 45s, caps.
One great advantage for repair is that they can actually be connected
without shutting off the water (yeah, its messy and you probably need to
open a faucet to keep the pressure low) or completely draining the pipe.


I like to replace the supply valves for my cloth washer and other
supply valves under sink. I guess that soldering may be the better
option here. Thx.


[email protected] June 8th 06 09:58 PM

use compression or solder?
 
I agrre with all the above posters who would not use a compression
fiting execpt in places where they can see it (although I don't even
use them there). I simply don't trust them.


PipeDown June 8th 06 10:21 PM

use compression or solder?
 

wrote in message
oups.com...

PipeDown wrote:
For the most part (in typical residential plumbing) hard copper pipe is
soldered except for a few things like supply valves at sinks, After that
they are useful for repair but I wouldn't use them in a new setup if only
for the vastly higher price per connection. Soft copper tubing usually
uses
compression fittings.

Besides do they even have compression fittings for elbows, tees, 45s,
caps.
One great advantage for repair is that they can actually be connected
without shutting off the water (yeah, its messy and you probably need to
open a faucet to keep the pressure low) or completely draining the pipe.


I like to replace the supply valves for my cloth washer and other
supply valves under sink. I guess that soldering may be the better
option here. Thx.


Probably OK for that but I prefer to solder on a male threaded adapter then
attach the valve to that. Makes it easy to change out in the future.



Salmon Egg June 8th 06 11:30 PM

use compression or solder?
 
On 6/8/06 10:09 AM, in article
, "
wrote:

Hi,

I am wondering how "safe and effective" is to use compression method
instead of soldering for joint of copper pipe and fittings? I am not
comfortable with soldering, but not sure using compression is
"water-tight enough" for joint or not, thx.

This reply probably does not apply but...

Cold welding is possible and definitely will not leak. Oxygen-Free High
Conductivity (OFHC) copper is used in vacuum tubes. The vacuum seal is
formed by pinching of the copper exhaust tube with a tool that looks like a
bolt cutter but has rounded jaws. The copper flows and becomes vacuum tight.

Probably, this is not what you mean by a compression fitting.

Bill
-- Ferme le Bush



Casino Knight June 9th 06 12:53 AM

use compression or solder?
 

wrote in message
oups.com...
Hi,

I am wondering how "safe and effective" is to use compression method
instead of soldering for joint of copper pipe and fittings? I am not
comfortable with soldering, but not sure using compression is
"water-tight enough" for joint or not, thx.


This is all you need, don't sweat it. Pun intened
http://www.cashacme.com/sharkbite.html



Mark and Kim Smith June 9th 06 03:52 AM

use compression or solder?
 
Ralph Mowery wrote:

wrote in message
roups.com...


Hi,

I am wondering how "safe and effective" is to use compression method
instead of soldering for joint of copper pipe and fittings? I am not
comfortable with soldering, but not sure using compression is
"water-tight enough" for joint or not, thx.




If done correctly the compression fittings are just as good as the soldered
connections. I work in a very large plant and we have thousands to millions
of copper and stainless steel connections using the compression fittings.
Anywhere from a few pounds of air to several hundred psi of various
chemicals.





I'll bet that stainless stuff is flare / JIC fittings.

[email protected] June 9th 06 05:58 PM

use compression or solder?
 
wrote:
Hi,

I am wondering how "safe and effective" is to use compression method
instead of soldering for joint of copper pipe and fittings? I am not
comfortable with soldering, but not sure using compression is
"water-tight enough" for joint or not, thx.


Hello:

I have a strong preference for solder. I've used an industrial type of
compression fitting in my lab with great success....but the
hardware-store type of compression fitting seems to be rather
hit-or-miss. Sometimes they work, sometimes they leak.

Suggestion: You might consider buying a few feet of 1/2" copper pipe,
a dozen solder fittings, solder, torch, tubing cutter, flux, cleaning
brush, etc.. Cut the pipe into 2"-3" lengths. Find a good book in the
library on soldering, follow the directions. Practice soldering a few
dozen joints. You will gain experience and confidence.

Cleaning is the important step.

Best -- Terry


professorpaul June 10th 06 12:23 AM

use compression or solder?
 
I am inclined to solder, but in a house I had for 35 years, I was
reluctant to solder some pipes near the water meter. I was putting in a
"wet" darkroom for photographic work. I made it a point to CLEAN the
tubing well, and to lubricate it well (threads, pipe) before using the
compression fittings. For the 4 additional years I owned the house, I
had no problems at all with the compression fittings. Clean was the
trick, I believe.


[email protected] June 11th 06 01:27 AM

use compression or solder?
 

wrote:
wrote:
Hi,

I am wondering how "safe and effective" is to use compression method
instead of soldering for joint of copper pipe and fittings? I am not
comfortable with soldering, but not sure using compression is
"water-tight enough" for joint or not, thx.


Hello:

I have a strong preference for solder. I've used an industrial type of
compression fitting in my lab with great success....but the
hardware-store type of compression fitting seems to be rather
hit-or-miss. Sometimes they work, sometimes they leak.

Suggestion: You might consider buying a few feet of 1/2" copper pipe,
a dozen solder fittings, solder, torch, tubing cutter, flux, cleaning
brush, etc.. Cut the pipe into 2"-3" lengths. Find a good book in the
library on soldering, follow the directions. Practice soldering a few
dozen joints. You will gain experience and confidence.

Cleaning is the important step.

Best -- Terry



Actually, I did practice a couple of times like you mentioned, but I
cannot tell whether the thing I solder is leaking or not. I never try
on real thing since I fail, I may end up calling emergency repair(the
thing I want to replace the valves under the sink which can not be shut
off without shutting off main valve), it may be costly than just call a
plumber to do it for me.


[email protected] June 11th 06 01:32 AM

use compression or solder?
 

professorpaul wrote:
I am inclined to solder, but in a house I had for 35 years, I was
reluctant to solder some pipes near the water meter. I was putting in a
"wet" darkroom for photographic work. I made it a point to CLEAN the
tubing well, and to lubricate it well (threads, pipe) before using the
compression fittings. For the 4 additional years I owned the house, I
had no problems at all with the compression fittings. Clean was the
trick, I believe.


I am able install successfuly a water hammer arrester for the dish
washer using two soft copper pipes. It seems to me that only soft
copper is suitable for compression fittings at least as the Balck &
Decker home repair book suggests. But the book also mentions that
copper with type M is also suitable for compression fittings. The house
I own is over 25 years old, not sure what type of copper was used
originally.


Stormin Mormon June 13th 06 03:41 AM

use compression or solder?
 
Please write us instructions how to "done correctly".

--

Christopher A. Young
You can't shout down a troll.
You have to starve them.
..

"Ralph Mowery" wrote in message
k.net...


If done correctly the compression fittings are just as good as the
soldered
connections. I work in a very large plant and we have thousands to
millions
of copper and stainless steel connections using the compression
fittings.
Anywhere from a few pounds of air to several hundred psi of various
chemicals.




Stormin Mormon June 13th 06 03:41 AM

use compression or solder?
 
That makes for a good seal, and also easy service. You can also
compression on a valve. Seen em.

--

Christopher A. Young
You can't shout down a troll.
You have to starve them.
..

"PipeDown" wrote in message
ink.net...


Probably OK for that but I prefer to solder on a male threaded adapter
then
attach the valve to that. Makes it easy to change out in the future.




Robert Allison June 13th 06 04:00 AM

use compression or solder?
 
Ralph Mowery wrote:
wrote in message
oups.com...

Hi,

I am wondering how "safe and effective" is to use compression method
instead of soldering for joint of copper pipe and fittings? I am not
comfortable with soldering, but not sure using compression is
"water-tight enough" for joint or not, thx.



If done correctly the compression fittings are just as good as the soldered
connections. I work in a very large plant and we have thousands to millions
of copper and stainless steel connections using the compression fittings.
Anywhere from a few pounds of air to several hundred psi of various
chemicals.



Did you also notice that that plant has an entire crew of
maintenance workers to constantly check and repair anything
that breaks or fails? And hundreds of instruments in the
control rooms to let you know when something is leaking or
losing pressure?

If you have those in your home, and all of the compression
fittings are exposed, then I would recommend going with the
CFs everywhere.

--
Robert Allison
Rimshot, Inc.
Georgetown, TX

Grumman-581 June 14th 06 05:30 PM

use compression or solder?
 
On Thu, 08 Jun 2006 18:40:49 GMT, Robert Allison
wrote:
Compression fittings can last for years and mostly they do
last, but they are much more likely to fail over time than
soldered joints.


I've had problematic compression fittings over the years... Often I
get fed up enough with them and change them to flared fittings... It
seems that with compression fittings, there is a certain amount of
force that you can use to tighten the fitting -- too little and it
will leak, too much and it will deform the fitting and also leak...
With flared fittings, it seems that you can really torque it down and
it won't deform and start leaking... YMMV, of course...


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