[AT] Water Lines
charlie hill
charliehill at embarqmail.com
Fri Jan 4 06:46:03 PST 2013
Cecil, I just checked the Lowes web site and they didn't show anything
bigger than 5/8.
Maybe my search just didn't find it. Most any plumbing supply house or farm
supply
will have it or be able to get it.
Charlie
-----Original Message-----
From: Cecil R Bearden
Sent: Friday, January 04, 2013 9:05 AM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group
Subject: Re: [AT] Water Lines
Lowe's has a lot of it at a reasonable price. I used to buy a lot of
pipe at Pumpco Supply, I think they also had a store in Tulsa. Locke
Supply will give a pretty god discount to the end user. You can also
use the 1 inch 200 psi PVC glued joint. I have pulled that pipe in a
ripped trench also. I have 3000 ft of pipe 6 ft deep for my heat
exchanger here. It is 2 inch 160 psi. The black plastic pipe connects
with barbed connections and hose clamps. Contrary to this list opinion,
I have had very good success with plastic Hose barbs. The galvanized
ones rust. The olastic ones I have used were the same size as schedule
40 PVC. The new PEX pipe that used copper crimp rings is really great.
I have used it and had good success. The 1 inch pex uses brass barbs.
If I was to build a new heat and air system, I would use a ground source
heat pump for my air conditioning and water heating, then an outdoor
boiler for heating the house, water, dryer, and stock tank heat.
Cecil in OKla
On 1/3/2013 10:58 PM, moscowengnr at yahoo.com wrote:
> The posts on water lines were really informative. I am getting ready to
> install 500 to 600 feet of water line to connect a new cabin I am building
> on back of property where house in front burned down with Oklahoma
> wildfires.
>
> Where can you purchase the rolled plastic pipe that was mentioned in some
> of the posts??
>
> Is this similar to what is used for some gas lines??
>
> Does it do joints by heating and pressing together?? if so does this work
> well?? where do you get tools for this??
>
> This may be interesting for water lines, but I also want to try some
> experimenting with ground heat exchangers for heat and air. Having a long
> roll of plastic pipe would help with a few trial projects both in
> Oklahoma, and also here in Texas for my shop here.
>
>
>
> Thanks,
>
> Dennis
>
>
>
>
>
> Sent from Windows Mail
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