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scottpepsi December 20th 08 01:41 PM

plumbing air pressure test
 

I am adding a walk-in shower with rainshower head mounted from ceiling, 4
body sprays mounted in the wall, a handheld body wand, an exact temp
control valve, and 3 volume control valves . I have 3/4" pex supply lines
to temp valve, then 1/2" copper to control valves,then 1/2" pex to
respective sprays. I have capped everything, and applied an air gauge. I
placed 85 psi of air. In a period of appx. 40 hours, the pressure has
dropped to 75 psi. Does this indicate a leak, or is this an acceptable
loss attributed to tempature fluctuation or some other variable? What is
generaly accepted as a succesful test?(time/pressure)
-------------------------------------




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Ernie Willson December 20th 08 04:36 PM

plumbing air pressure test
 
When you consider all the variables involved, then, I think you have a
valid test and that you can expect the system not to leak. Remember that
air leaks a lot more easily than water.

EJ in NJ

scottpepsi wrote:
I am adding a walk-in shower with rainshower head mounted from ceiling, 4
body sprays mounted in the wall, a handheld body wand, an exact temp
control valve, and 3 volume control valves . I have 3/4" pex supply lines
to temp valve, then 1/2" copper to control valves,then 1/2" pex to
respective sprays. I have capped everything, and applied an air gauge. I
placed 85 psi of air. In a period of appx. 40 hours, the pressure has
dropped to 75 psi. Does this indicate a leak, or is this an acceptable
loss attributed to tempature fluctuation or some other variable? What is
generaly accepted as a succesful test?(time/pressure)
-------------------------------------




##-----------------------------------------------##
Delivered via http://www.thestuccocompany.com/
Building Construction and Maintenance Forum
Web and RSS access to your favorite newsgroup -
alt.home.repair - 330455 messages and counting!
##-----------------------------------------------##


Steve Barker[_4_] December 20th 08 04:37 PM

plumbing air pressure test
 
turn on the water, that is the test.

s

"scottpepsi" wrote in message
om...

I am adding a walk-in shower with rainshower head mounted from ceiling, 4
body sprays mounted in the wall, a handheld body wand, an exact temp
control valve, and 3 volume control valves . I have 3/4" pex supply lines
to temp valve, then 1/2" copper to control valves,then 1/2" pex to
respective sprays. I have capped everything, and applied an air gauge. I
placed 85 psi of air. In a period of appx. 40 hours, the pressure has
dropped to 75 psi. Does this indicate a leak, or is this an acceptable
loss attributed to tempature fluctuation or some other variable? What is
generaly accepted as a succesful test?(time/pressure)
-------------------------------------




##-----------------------------------------------##
Delivered via http://www.thestuccocompany.com/
Building Construction and Maintenance Forum
Web and RSS access to your favorite newsgroup -
alt.home.repair - 330455 messages and counting!
##-----------------------------------------------##




Roger Shoaf December 21st 08 07:08 PM

plumbing air pressure test
 

"scottpepsi" wrote in message
om...

I am adding a walk-in shower with rainshower head mounted from ceiling, 4
body sprays mounted in the wall, a handheld body wand, an exact temp
control valve, and 3 volume control valves . I have 3/4" pex supply lines
to temp valve, then 1/2" copper to control valves,then 1/2" pex to
respective sprays. I have capped everything, and applied an air gauge. I
placed 85 psi of air. In a period of appx. 40 hours, the pressure has
dropped to 75 psi. Does this indicate a leak, or is this an acceptable
loss attributed to tempature fluctuation or some other variable? What is
generaly accepted as a succesful test?(time/pressure)
-------------------------------------


It does indicate a leak, but it does not necessarily indicate a water leak,
nor does it rule it out either.

I would fill the system with water and try the pressure test again. I think
that they only use pressure tests on gas lines and those are about 15 PSI
for 24hrs.



JC[_2_] December 21st 08 08:13 PM

plumbing air pressure test
 

"Roger Shoaf" wrote in message
...

"scottpepsi" wrote in
message
om...

I am adding a walk-in shower with rainshower head mounted from
ceiling, 4
body sprays mounted in the wall, a handheld body wand, an exact
temp
control valve, and 3 volume control valves . I have 3/4" pex supply
lines
to temp valve, then 1/2" copper to control valves,then 1/2" pex to
respective sprays. I have capped everything, and applied an air
gauge. I
placed 85 psi of air. In a period of appx. 40 hours, the pressure
has
dropped to 75 psi. Does this indicate a leak, or is this an
acceptable
loss attributed to tempature fluctuation or some other variable?
What is
generaly accepted as a succesful test?(time/pressure)
-------------------------------------


It does indicate a leak, but it does not necessarily indicate a
water leak,
nor does it rule it out either.

I would fill the system with water and try the pressure test again.
I think
that they only use pressure tests on gas lines and those are about
15 PSI
for 24hrs.


Yep, I was wondering abut that. I've never heard of an air pressure
test on water lines although I suppose it could be a good indicator. I
just did propane line. Code is 15 for 12 around here.


JIMMIE December 22nd 08 12:56 AM

plumbing air pressure test
 
On Dec 21, 3:13*pm, "JC" wrote:
"Roger Shoaf" wrote in message

...





"scottpepsi" wrote in
message
. com...


I am adding a walk-in shower with rainshower head mounted from
ceiling, 4
body sprays mounted in the wall, a handheld body wand, an exact
temp
control valve, and 3 volume control valves . I have 3/4" pex supply
lines
to temp valve, then 1/2" copper to control valves,then 1/2" pex to
respective sprays. I have capped everything, and applied an air
gauge. I
placed 85 psi of air. In a period of appx. 40 hours, the pressure
has
dropped to 75 psi. Does this indicate a leak, or is this an
acceptable
loss attributed to tempature fluctuation or some other variable?
What is
generaly accepted as a succesful test?(time/pressure)
-------------------------------------


It does indicate a leak, but it does not necessarily indicate a
water leak,
nor does it rule it out either.


I would fill the system with water and try the pressure test again.
I think
that they only use pressure tests on gas lines and those are about
15 PSI
for 24hrs.


Yep, I was wondering abut that. I've never heard of an air pressure
test on water lines although I suppose it could be a good indicator. I
just did propane line. Code is 15 for 12 around here.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


They pressure test water lines here. I think the pressure has to hold
for 48 hrs. I know because I was here when my neighbors house was
built. It flunked the test 3 times, BAD GUAGE.
What I dont understand id that it can leak some and still pass the
test. I dont remember what the requirements were but it didnt make
sense to me that it was OK for it to leak down any at all.

Jimmie

Steve Barker[_4_] December 22nd 08 01:51 AM

plumbing air pressure test
 
actually the gas line test is 15 psi for 10 minutes.

s


"Roger Shoaf" wrote in message
...


It does indicate a leak, but it does not necessarily indicate a water
leak,
nor does it rule it out either.

I would fill the system with water and try the pressure test again. I
think
that they only use pressure tests on gas lines and those are about 15 PSI
for 24hrs.





Charles Bishop[_2_] December 22nd 08 02:26 AM

plumbing air pressure test
 
In article , "Steve Barker"
wrote:

actually the gas line test is 15 psi for 10 minutes.


Does it matter if it's natural gas or propane?

[snip]

--
charles

Steve Barker[_4_] December 22nd 08 03:09 AM

plumbing air pressure test
 
nope. except that if it's propane, the propane co. will usually test it for
you before they hook up.

s


"Charles Bishop" wrote in message
...
In article , "Steve Barker"
wrote:

actually the gas line test is 15 psi for 10 minutes.


Does it matter if it's natural gas or propane?

[snip]

--
charles




Ed Pawlowski December 22nd 08 03:15 AM

plumbing air pressure test
 

"JIMMIE" wrote in message
What I dont understand id that it can leak some and still pass the
test. I dont remember what the requirements were but it didnt make
sense to me that it was OK for it to leak down any at all.

************************************************** ***
Molecules in air are smaller than water molecules, thus air can leak where
water will not. Just as air can pass through a plastic storage bag. That
is why you get freezer burn after a time.



Tony Hwang December 22nd 08 03:15 AM

plumbing air pressure test
 
JIMMIE wrote:
On Dec 21, 3:13 pm, "JC" wrote:
"Roger Shoaf" wrote in message

...





"scottpepsi" wrote in
message
om...
I am adding a walk-in shower with rainshower head mounted from
ceiling, 4
body sprays mounted in the wall, a handheld body wand, an exact
temp
control valve, and 3 volume control valves . I have 3/4" pex supply
lines
to temp valve, then 1/2" copper to control valves,then 1/2" pex to
respective sprays. I have capped everything, and applied an air
gauge. I
placed 85 psi of air. In a period of appx. 40 hours, the pressure
has
dropped to 75 psi. Does this indicate a leak, or is this an
acceptable
loss attributed to tempature fluctuation or some other variable?
What is
generaly accepted as a succesful test?(time/pressure)
-------------------------------------
It does indicate a leak, but it does not necessarily indicate a
water leak,
nor does it rule it out either.
I would fill the system with water and try the pressure test again.
I think
that they only use pressure tests on gas lines and those are about
15 PSI
for 24hrs.

Yep, I was wondering abut that. I've never heard of an air pressure
test on water lines although I suppose it could be a good indicator. I
just did propane line. Code is 15 for 12 around here.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


They pressure test water lines here. I think the pressure has to hold
for 48 hrs. I know because I was here when my neighbors house was
built. It flunked the test 3 times, BAD GUAGE.
What I dont understand id that it can leak some and still pass the
test. I dont remember what the requirements were but it didnt make
sense to me that it was OK for it to leak down any at all.

Jimmie

Hi,
Same in my area. They pressure test it for at least 48 hours in new
build houses.

Phisherman[_2_] December 22nd 08 12:38 PM

plumbing air pressure test
 
On 20 Dec 2008 13:41:37 GMT,
(scottpepsi) wrote:


I am adding a walk-in shower with rainshower head mounted from ceiling, 4
body sprays mounted in the wall, a handheld body wand, an exact temp
control valve, and 3 volume control valves . I have 3/4" pex supply lines
to temp valve, then 1/2" copper to control valves,then 1/2" pex to
respective sprays. I have capped everything, and applied an air gauge. I
placed 85 psi of air. In a period of appx. 40 hours, the pressure has
dropped to 75 psi. Does this indicate a leak, or is this an acceptable
loss attributed to tempature fluctuation or some other variable? What is
generaly accepted as a succesful test?(time/pressure)
-------------------------------------




It would make it easy to install two ball valves in the supply lines.

Bob F December 23rd 08 12:20 AM

plumbing air pressure test
 

"scottpepsi" wrote in message
om...

I am adding a walk-in shower with rainshower head mounted from ceiling, 4
body sprays mounted in the wall, a handheld body wand, an exact temp
control valve, and 3 volume control valves . I have 3/4" pex supply lines
to temp valve, then 1/2" copper to control valves,then 1/2" pex to
respective sprays. I have capped everything, and applied an air gauge. I
placed 85 psi of air. In a period of appx. 40 hours, the pressure has
dropped to 75 psi. Does this indicate a leak, or is this an acceptable
loss attributed to tempature fluctuation or some other variable? What is
generaly accepted as a succesful test?(time/pressure)
-------------------------------------


Get out a spray bottle of soap water (dish detergent in water or windex) and
spray the joints and fittings, valves, etc. while the pipes are air pressurized.
You will find the leak, fix it, then try the test again. If there are no air
leaks, there should be no water leaks.



Bob F December 23rd 08 12:22 AM

plumbing air pressure test
 

"Bob F" wrote in message
...

"scottpepsi" wrote in message
om...

I am adding a walk-in shower with rainshower head mounted from ceiling, 4
body sprays mounted in the wall, a handheld body wand, an exact temp
control valve, and 3 volume control valves . I have 3/4" pex supply lines
to temp valve, then 1/2" copper to control valves,then 1/2" pex to
respective sprays. I have capped everything, and applied an air gauge. I
placed 85 psi of air. In a period of appx. 40 hours, the pressure has
dropped to 75 psi. Does this indicate a leak, or is this an acceptable
loss attributed to tempature fluctuation or some other variable? What is
generaly accepted as a succesful test?(time/pressure)
-------------------------------------


Get out a spray bottle of soap water (dish detergent in water or windex) and
spray the joints and fittings, valves, etc. while the pipes are air
pressurized. You will find the leak, fix it, then try the test again. If there
are no air leaks, there should be no water leaks.


Incidentially, I air tested my pipes when I replumbed, and was glad I did. It is
a lot easier to re-solder joints before you put water in them.




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