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On Feb 6, 10:02*pm, "Ed Pawlowski" wrote:
? "Larry W" wrote He got everything installed and sweated but when he turned the water on, it leaked at one of the threaded fittings. He looked at the situation, realized he couldn't tighten the connection since everything else was soldered in place, so he took the easy way out. He grabbed the torch and sweated the threaded connection. Is he looking at problems down the road? I don't think he'll have any problems until the time comes to take it apart, but I sure am curious as to how he cleaned and fluxed that joint after it had been screwed together, and also how the flux reacted with the pipe dope or pipe tape. Sounds like he did none of that. *My guess is that he has solder holding just at the lip, not inside the joint. *I doubt he'd have a catastrophic failure, but certainly could stat dripping soon. We have a winner here. In the situation as described, the threaded connection should have had teflon tape or joint compound and it was already made up and not taken apart again. If those are present, it can't be soldered properly. And if they aren't present, there is still no way to properly clean the connection or get flux in there without taking it apart. Aside from all that, let's assume you tried to do this from scratch. First, you couldn't clean it well to remove oxide because of the threads being present. Second, in a slip fitting, meant to be soldered, the solder is drawn in by wicking action and gets sucked into the space through the whole slip fitting where the parts meet. With a threaded connection, at best it the solder would probably get in only a thread or two deep. Could it be enough so that it forms a seal and the rest of the threaded connection supplies the mechanical strentgh so that it works? Yes, but it isn't the right way to do things, particularly if it's a place behind a shower where access later could be a headache. |
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