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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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I'm toying with the idea of running a buried natural gas line out to
the garage for a hot air furnace as well as my foundry furnace (now propane) I'de have to cover about 25 feet from the basement to the detached garage. What are my options for piping? I recall hearing about a direct burial stainless product, but cant seem to find any info on it for a DIY installation. I relaize cast iron is not suitable for direct burial, but is is OK within a counduit of some sort? I'de prefer something flexible for easy of installation, but will gladly make do with whatever works best. Vin |
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Around here, nothing but a yellow flex poly tubing is acceptable. Has to be the
right plastic so gas will not weep through and has to be yellow or orange so people will reconize it when they find it accidently. Uses special conectors with glads to prevent leaks. Years ago, I used black poly tubing and every time my property flooded, I could fine the location of the buried gas line from the tiny bubbles in the floodwater. |
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Find a local propane supplier in your Yellow Pages. They routinely bury
flexible tubing in trenches from the tank to the buildings, and you could probably just buy the tubing and end fittings from them. Tom Dacon wrote in message oups.com... I'm toying with the idea of running a buried natural gas line out to the garage for a hot air furnace as well as my foundry furnace (now propane) I'de have to cover about 25 feet from the basement to the detached garage. What are my options for piping? I recall hearing about a direct burial stainless product, but cant seem to find any info on it for a DIY installation. I relaize cast iron is not suitable for direct burial, but is is OK within a counduit of some sort? I'de prefer something flexible for easy of installation, but will gladly make do with whatever works best. Vin |
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Cast iron gas line????? You better hire a licensed plumber to do the job
before you blow yourself up. wrote in message oups.com... I'm toying with the idea of running a buried natural gas line out to the garage for a hot air furnace as well as my foundry furnace (now propane) I'de have to cover about 25 feet from the basement to the detached garage. What are my options for piping? I recall hearing about a direct burial stainless product, but cant seem to find any info on it for a DIY installation. I relaize cast iron is not suitable for direct burial, but is is OK within a counduit of some sort? I'de prefer something flexible for easy of installation, but will gladly make do with whatever works best. Vin |
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"Tony" wrote in news:6z2xd.2021$pM7.1689
@fe08.lga: Cast iron gas line????? You better hire a licensed plumber to do the job before you blow yourself up. The OP was probably referring to black iron, the hard pipe of choice for gas lines inside a building. -- Anthony You can't 'idiot proof' anything....every time you try, they just make better idiots. Remove sp to reply via email |
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Bamboo joined with tree sap...just like indoor air lines!
wrote in message oups.com... I'm toying with the idea of running a buried natural gas line out to the garage for a hot air furnace as well as my foundry furnace (now propane) I'de have to cover about 25 feet from the basement to the detached garage. What are my options for piping? I recall hearing about a direct burial stainless product, but cant seem to find any info on it for a DIY installation. I relaize cast iron is not suitable for direct burial, but is is OK within a counduit of some sort? I'de prefer something flexible for easy of installation, but will gladly make do with whatever works best. Vin |
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The code for buried lines is different, so you can't just use
above-ground products. Where I live, poly flex pipe is typically used in a trench 24" deep with a copper tracer wire attached so it can be located later on. An alternative (if code allows) is the coated iron pipe, or tin lined copper tubing. These are metal, so no tracer wire is needed, but they can have corrosion problems in certain soils. Plumbing supply houses should have the pipe and fittings and some won't even balk at a DIY if you don't seem too dumb. But be aware that the gas company might cut you off if they find any hack work attaching your line to their meter. Since you mentioned a foundry furnace, please consider the capacity of your existing meter before you add on any more appliances. Look at the tag on the front of the meter and it will list the cu.ft./hour rating. Multiply that by 1000, and that's about how many BTU you can get through the regulator in the meter. If the meter maxes out at 175000 BTU, and your house needs 100K BTU for the water heater and furnace, you aren't going to have any pressure to run a million BTU foundry furnace in the garage. My advice is for you to dig the ditch and hire a licensed heating contractor to size and lay the gas line. That will save you some money and it will keep the gas company happy. wrote: I'm toying with the idea of running a buried natural gas line out to the garage for a hot air furnace as well as my foundry furnace (now propane) I'de have to cover about 25 feet from the basement to the detached garage. What are my options for piping? I recall hearing about a direct burial stainless product, but cant seem to find any info on it for a DIY installation. I relaize cast iron is not suitable for direct burial, but is is OK within a counduit of some sort? I'de prefer something flexible for easy of installation, but will gladly make do with whatever works best. Vin |
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On Sun, 19 Dec 2004 00:18:19 GMT, "Tom Gardner"
calmly ranted: Bamboo joined with tree sap...just like indoor air lines! Du ma nhieu, Tahm. ![]() -- Sex is Evil, Evil is Sin, Sin is Forgiven. Gee, ain't religion GREAT? --------------------------------------------- http://diversify.com Sin-free Website Design |
#10
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Better check with your local Building Code and your insurance company. A
non-code installation may very well be legal grounds for denying a claim. wrote in message oups.com... I'm toying with the idea of running a buried natural gas line out to the garage for a hot air furnace as well as my foundry furnace (now propane) I'de have to cover about 25 feet from the basement to the detached garage. What are my options for piping? I recall hearing about a direct burial stainless product, but cant seem to find any info on it for a DIY installation. I relaize cast iron is not suitable for direct burial, but is is OK within a counduit of some sort? I'de prefer something flexible for easy of installation, but will gladly make do with whatever works best. Vin |
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Tom Dacon wrote:
Find a local propane supplier in your Yellow Pages. They routinely bury flexible tubing in trenches from the tank to the buildings, and you could probably just buy the tubing and end fittings from them. Tom Dacon wrote in message oups.com... I'm toying with the idea of running a buried natural gas line out to the garage for a hot air furnace as well as my foundry furnace (now propane) I'de have to cover about 25 feet from the basement to the detached garage. What are my options for piping? I recall hearing about a direct burial stainless product, but cant seem to find any info on it for a DIY installation. I relaize cast iron is not suitable for direct burial, but is is OK within a counduit of some sort? I'de prefer something flexible for easy of installation, but will gladly make do with whatever works best. Vin They might do that at your house, but not here! It is semi-solid high pressure to a regulator. The Regulator sits on a Yellow coated black iron pipe. That pipe connects to the house black iron pipe. The Flexible is used from iron pipe to Hot water heater. Only the coated ones. That is standard code. If you go to the Lumber or Building Yard and ask them - they will show you the pipe. Talk to a plumber or the Gas people - they don't lay lines the plumbers do. Gas types attach their tank to the plumbers lines. Martin -- Martin Eastburn, Barbara Eastburn @ home at Lion's Lair with our computer NRA LOH, NRA Life NRA Second Amendment Task Force Charter Founder |
#12
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On Sat, 18 Dec 2004 18:59:10 -0800, Larry Jaques
wrote: On Sun, 19 Dec 2004 00:18:19 GMT, "Tom Gardner" calmly ranted: Bamboo joined with tree sap...just like indoor air lines! Du ma nhieu, Tahm. ![]() ROFLMAO! Though Id have to say Tom is not the tahm type. Maybe re tien or khinh ai Gunner "To be civilized is to restrain the ability to commit mayhem. To be incapable of committing mayhem is not the mark of the civilized, merely the domesticated." - Trefor Thomas |
#13
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#14
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![]() Big copper line covers the distance from the house to the propane tank. The propane company put it 12" deep. I've also got copper running across the basement ceiling to extend the line from the furnace to the fireplace upstairs for the gas logs. Steve. wrote in message oups.com... I'm toying with the idea of running a buried natural gas line out to the garage for a hot air furnace as well as my foundry furnace (now propane) I'de have to cover about 25 feet from the basement to the detached garage. What are my options for piping? I recall hearing about a direct burial stainless product, but cant seem to find any info on it for a DIY installation. I relaize cast iron is not suitable for direct burial, but is is OK within a counduit of some sort? I'de prefer something flexible for easy of installation, but will gladly make do with whatever works best. Vin |
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Had NG plumbed into the garage 6 years ago,nice having a warm garage to work
in! Do yourself a big,big favour. Dig a decent trench and lay in 4" conduit or weeping tile FIRST ! Then pull the approved gas line(yellow palstic up here) through. While your at it pull some Bell quad,2 or 3 circuits.Good for phone and alarm circuits. Where the plastic terminates inside, transition to black iron pipe. Put a Tee here,for future expansion to the gas BBQ and put extras Tees next to the furnace and the final termination. Again for 'future' uses. You will need them...glad I did it. Oh yeah, when you backfill the trench,lots of gravell first, then a layer of 1x6 PT fence boards then dirt.Boards will warn you when you dig in that area. Jay |
#16
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?Translation?
"Gunner" wrote in message ... On Sat, 18 Dec 2004 18:59:10 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Sun, 19 Dec 2004 00:18:19 GMT, "Tom Gardner" calmly ranted: Bamboo joined with tree sap...just like indoor air lines! Du ma nhieu, Tahm. ![]() ROFLMAO! Though Id have to say Tom is not the tahm type. Maybe re tien or khinh ai Gunner "To be civilized is to restrain the ability to commit mayhem. To be incapable of committing mayhem is not the mark of the civilized, merely the domesticated." - Trefor Thomas |
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On Sun, 19 Dec 2004 08:43:01 GMT, Gunner
calmly ranted: On Sat, 18 Dec 2004 18:59:10 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: On Sun, 19 Dec 2004 00:18:19 GMT, "Tom Gardner" calmly ranted: Bamboo joined with tree sap...just like indoor air lines! Du ma nhieu, Tahm. ![]() ROFLMAO! See what endless bounds of joy that reading various books can bring? I'd heard the phrase "doom on you" before but never knew what it meant until I read "Rogue Warrior", then I was in tears from laughing so hard. Though Id have to say Tom is not the tahm type. Over on the Wreck, the "ah" replaces the "o" for a Boston accent. Bahstahn. Bahstahd. I hadn't even considered taht it might translate into Viet. titter Maybe re tien or khinh ai Darn, I don't speak Vietnamese. Translation, please? Google translates the Viet or Thai pages from simplified Chinese into Chinese with half the text as question marks. Real good, folks. Never mind. I found http://www.ksvn.com/cgi-bin/vietanh2.cgi (BTW, Tahm doesn't translate.) -- Sex is Evil, Evil is Sin, Sin is Forgiven. Gee, ain't religion GREAT? --------------------------------------------- http://diversify.com Sin-free Website Design |
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On Sun, 19 Dec 2004 15:09:48 GMT, "Tom Gardner"
calmly ranted: ?Translation? It was a gentle "FY" said between friends. ![]() FahQue, but in a nice way, knowwhatImean? On Sun, 19 Dec 2004 00:18:19 GMT, "Tom Gardner" calmly ranted: Bamboo joined with tree sap...just like indoor air lines! Du ma nhieu, Tahm. ![]() -- Save the Endangered ROAD NARROWS! -|- www.diversify.com Ban SUVs today! -|- Full Service Websites |
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On Sun, 19 Dec 2004 07:13:03 -0800, Larry Jaques
wrote: Maybe re tien or khinh ai Darn, I don't speak Vietnamese. Translation, please? Google translates the Viet or Thai pages from simplified Chinese into Chinese with half the text as question marks. Real good, folks. Never mind. I found http://www.ksvn.com/cgi-bin/vietanh2.cgi (BTW, Tahm doesn't translate.) Tham (minus the punctuation marks...) means greedy or avaricious ret tien or khinh ai means roughly..frugal and wise with his money...or a cheap skate depending on slang G We would have to download an additonal charector set to display the punctuations...G Working in Viet machine shops all week has some advantages, once I got over the hair rising on the back of my neck issues for the first year or so. Tommy...he Numba One Giiii!! btw...one of the better online dictionaries for Vietnamese is http://vdict.com/ I have to use it occasionally when my pocket guide fails me, as my book is a little light on technical terms. Fortunately. most of my little people speak pretty good english, though the accents can be a bit tricky to understand. Particularly if its the end of the day and they are playing cards and drinking Ba mi Ba beer. Its been said repeatedly with great accuracy, that a group of happy Viets sounds just like a flock of ducs....er...ducks...G One other thing about the viet shops...there are usually ashtrays on each machine. Non of that anti-smoking California crap in thos shops..."555" or Marlbourgh cigarettes are the preference. And fancied up Honda Civics in the parking lot....G Gunner "To be civilized is to restrain the ability to commit mayhem. To be incapable of committing mayhem is not the mark of the civilized, merely the domesticated." - Trefor Thomas |
#20
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On Sun, 19 Dec 2004 19:46:21 GMT, Gunner
calmly ranted: On Sun, 19 Dec 2004 07:13:03 -0800, Larry Jaques wrote: Maybe re tien or khinh ai Darn, I don't speak Vietnamese. Translation, please? Google translates the Viet or Thai pages from simplified Chinese into Chinese with half the text as question marks. Real good, folks. Never mind. I found http://www.ksvn.com/cgi-bin/vietanh2.cgi (BTW, Tahm doesn't translate.) Tham (minus the punctuation marks...) means greedy or avaricious ret tien or khinh ai means roughly..frugal and wise with his money...or a cheap skate depending on slang G We would have to download an additonal charector set to display the punctuations...G Working in Viet machine shops all week has some advantages, once I got over the hair rising on the back of my neck issues for the first year or so. Yeah, I thought you might have a good Viet vocabulary working in HelL.A. machine shops. Was the hair raised from memories of fighting in Vietnam 30 years ago, abut the time I escaped it by the hair of my chinny chin chin? (Moved from Phoenix back to Vista just after turning 18 and drew a draft lottery number of 53. Luckily, the San Diego draft board didn't need any more bodies. Whew!) Tommy...he Numba One Giiii!! Yeah, I'm just giving him some ribbing^H^H^H^H^H^H^hchit for the bamboo/sap comment. btw...one of the better online dictionaries for Vietnamese is http://vdict.com/ I have to use it occasionally when my pocket guide fails me, as my book is a little light on technical terms. Fortunately. most of my little people speak pretty good english, though the accents can be a bit tricky to understand. Particularly if its the end of the day and they are playing cards and drinking Ba mi Ba beer. I used to work with a Viet gal (electronics test techs, both) at Palomar Technology back in the late 80s. She was a lot of fun and could make fun of her own accent. Every once in awhile, she'd ask us guys if we wanted any penis. When our eyebrows went up, she laughed and repronounced it "Pea Nuss". And we all went over with our hands out for a handful of peanuts. Another of her favorites was "I speak very English." I still laugh when I think about that one. Lien (Lyn) was a great little lady. Its been said repeatedly with great accuracy, that a group of happy Viets sounds just like a flock of ducs....er...ducks...G Did you ever eat at that L.A. restaurant, the Phat Phuc? One other thing about the viet shops...there are usually ashtrays on each machine. Non of that anti-smoking California crap in thos shops..."555" or Marlbourgh cigarettes are the preference. And fancied up Honda Civics in the parking lot....G I can't -believe- all the money that's tossed into those little rice burners. Amazing, to say the least. -- Save the Endangered ROAD NARROWS! -|- www.diversify.com Ban SUVs today! -|- Full Service Websites |
#21
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... I'm toying with the idea of running a buried natural gas line out to the garage for a hot air furnace as well as my foundry furnace (now propane) Now that everybody has given you the answers to code problems and other such stuff, there's one problem with using the natural gas with your foundry furnace. After the gas goes through the meter it comes out at about, IIRC, at 7psi or something like that. Not enough pressure and volume to run a foundry furnace. Bernd |
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Natural gas from the meter is regulated at 7 inches water column --
about 1/2 psi. If the meter can supply the required volume in cuft/hr, it will run kilns and furnaces. Bernd wrote: wrote in message oups.com... I'm toying with the idea of running a buried natural gas line out to the garage for a hot air furnace as well as my foundry furnace (now propane) Now that everybody has given you the answers to code problems and other such stuff, there's one problem with using the natural gas with your foundry furnace. After the gas goes through the meter it comes out at about, IIRC, at 7psi or something like that. Not enough pressure and volume to run a foundry furnace. Bernd |
#23
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![]() "Tim Killian" wrote in message ... Natural gas from the meter is regulated at 7 inches water column -- about 1/2 psi. If the meter can supply the required volume in cuft/hr, it will run kilns and furnaces. Tim, I know it will run a furnace since I have natural gas. What I meant is that I don't believe there is enough pressure and flow to properly run a "foundry furnace" since you'll need about 30psi to get a flame. That's my experience with propane for a 5 gallon style furnace and a Ron Reil burner. So I would think you would need approximately the same amount of pressure to run on natural gas. The foundry furnace I'm talking about is al Gingery style. Now the 1/2 psi and a good volume with a blower motor might work. Bernd |
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On Mon, 20 Dec 2004 08:51:52 -0700, Tim Killian
wrote: Bernd wrote: wrote in message oups.com... I'm toying with the idea of running a buried natural gas line out to the garage for a hot air furnace as well as my foundry furnace (now propane) Now that everybody has given you the answers to code problems and other such stuff, there's one problem with using the natural gas with your foundry furnace. After the gas goes through the meter it comes out at about, IIRC, at 7psi or something like that. Not enough pressure and volume to run a foundry furnace. Natural gas from the meter is regulated at 7 inches water column -- about 1/2 psi. If the meter can supply the required volume in cuft/hr, it will run kilns and furnaces. If you connect it, it will work. But the pipe will be whistling at very high flow rates, and pressure drop becomes a bigger problem. If you can get the local gas company to do it, they can deliver the gas from their regulator and gas meter at 5 or 10 PSI instead of 7" WC / ~1/2 PSI, and then you use a second pressure regulator near the appliance to knock it down to 7" WC. That allows you to flow a lot more gas for the pipe size and distance involved. But this is usually used for commercial and industrial applications, getting a medium-pressure feed done at a residence - even if only for the line back to the garage workshop - may be a huge problem. -- Bruce -- -- Bruce L. Bergman, Woodland Hills (Los Angeles) CA - Desktop Electrician for Westend Electric - CA726700 5737 Kanan Rd. #359, Agoura CA 91301 (818) 889-9545 Spamtrapped address: Remove the python and the invalid, and use a net. |
#25
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On Mon, 20 Dec 2004 16:45:48 GMT, "Bernd" wrote:
"Tim Killian" wrote in message ... Natural gas from the meter is regulated at 7 inches water column -- about 1/2 psi. If the meter can supply the required volume in cuft/hr, it will run kilns and furnaces. I know it will run a furnace since I have natural gas. What I meant is that I don't believe there is enough pressure and flow to properly run a "foundry furnace" since you'll need about 30psi to get a flame. That's my experience with propane for a 5 gallon style furnace and a Ron Reil burner. So I would think you would need approximately the same amount of pressure to run on natural gas. The foundry furnace I'm talking about is al Gingery style. Now the 1/2 psi and a good volume with a blower motor might work. Oh, that's what you meant... ;-) Yes, they use the gas delivery pressure to get forced air induction, the gas drags the air along and into the burner. You can do the same thing with an electric powered forced draft blower on the burner to get the air moving, then the low gas pressure will mix into the combustion air flow. This is how they build new hot-air furnaces and commercial water heater & boiler burners for Low NoX, the forced air and gas runs in "inshot" burners and gives a nice intense flamefront. You can also use a draft blower in suction on the flue side of a sealed combustion chamber, but they are more trouble - the blower wheel is running in the flue gases and corrosion is a big problem. Note: If this is going to be running unattended for more than a few seconds, be sure to add a diaphragm pressure switch on the blower output, and some sort of 'flame out sensor' linked to the gas valve control circuit. So if the forced draft blower quits for any reason the gas is shut off automatically. (A simple low-tech KISS way to shut off the gas is the old standby Penn-BASO B-60 valve and a millivolt thermopile pilot light [used in millions of floor and wall furnaces] with the diaphragm switch in series, or you can get fancy...) ;-) -- Bruce -- -- Bruce L. Bergman, Woodland Hills (Los Angeles) CA - Desktop Electrician for Westend Electric - CA726700 5737 Kanan Rd. #359, Agoura CA 91301 (818) 889-9545 Spamtrapped address: Remove the python and the invalid, and use a net. |
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