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Plus y’all are cowboys and yahoos
And drunkards and gamblers and womanizers.
Plus y’all are cowboys and yahoos
Hard to believe that passed code.@Lars R. Biden and others...
So here's the second PEX manifold in the attic. The attic runs of the lines are mostly run through the blown in insulation against the ceiling of the house. The other in the house has its own manifold. That manifold is behind an access panel at ground floor as it should be. This manifold is in the ceiling including the water shut off to that manifold which is problematic in its own right.
All the pipes look good and I don't see any failure of any fittings.
Because I have no hot water or cold water to this end of the house that's fed by this manifold, it's either the manifold or the main cold line I would assume and most likely the former. Or both. So to begin with I have a heating pad over the cold intake line and then wrap the entire manifold with a large blanket over that to heat the manifold and the cold water line.
All my hardware stores and Walmart and everything are closed today through Wednesday.
View attachment 28072View attachment 28073
Shark Bite or DIE!Just heat the room below that area and leave your attic entry door open for heat to enter
You will be fine...what temp is the air in that attic currently?
I don't like those shark bite fittings...I prefer a copper one piece manifold and all expansion Pex Fittings...probably sounds like gibberish but Expansion fittings are far superior to other Pex fittings
Hard to believe that passed code.
Heating pad is a good idea.
Turn you faucets on periodically.
The main water line to the manifold was frozen and all the hot water sides (which are towards the soffits and their vents) were frozen too.Hard to believe that passed code.
Heating pad is a good idea.
Turn you faucets on periodically.
You guys won’t do Shit!The main water line to the manifold was frozen and all the hot water sides (which are towards the soffits and their vents) were frozen too.
I now have functioning hot and cold water to everything except one pipe that's still thawing. No leaks spotted.
Yeah def will run faucet.
We of course regularly do that for our external taps when we're going to have a hard freeze. I was at the hospital last night but will be home tonight to manage things.
The houses aren't built for this kind of extended cold day after day after day so stuff like this happens.
The last time we had a cold stretch like this pics piping didn't exist. So it'll be real interesting to see what the results are with modern construction materials failing in this climate. May see some code changes.
We can handle it. Our society doesn't completely shit the bed like Texas when there's a little inclement weather.TWC reporting possible tornado in Florida Panhandle
Pex is better in cold than copper. Both freeze, but pex has some give. It's usually the joints and fittings that fail. Copper just bursts.The main water line to the manifold was frozen and all the hot water sides (which are towards the soffits and their vents) were frozen too.
I now have functioning hot and cold water to everything except one pipe that's still thawing. No leaks spotted.
Yeah def will run faucet.
We of course regularly do that for our external taps when we're going to have a hard freeze. I was at the hospital last night but will be home tonight to manage things.
The houses aren't built for this kind of extended cold day after day after day so stuff like this happens.
The last time we had a cold stretch like this pics piping didn't exist. So it'll be real interesting to see what the results are with modern construction materials failing in this climate. May see some code changes.
I'm going to need a video of you holding an American flag in the middle of the street while flipping off the tornado.We can handle it. Our society doesn't completely shit the bed like Texas when there's a little inclement weather.
I realize that. But pex runs through the attic are apparently not uncommon, unlike the other materials. The more I read the more I'm seeing people placing these manifolds in their attic trying to keep short runs to an attic water heater.Pex is better in cold than copper. Both freeze, but pex has some give. It's usually the joints and fittings that fail. Copper just bursts.
Regardless - it's not the type of water line used, it's the placement. I know you guys don't get extended cold snaps often, but if you do that installation is nearly guaranteed to fail.
No service when the power goes out, when power comes back the towers come back and we have service.Any Texans have Verizon Wireless?
I'm hearing there's no service in North Texas.
That's how my pex is runI realize that. But pex runs through the attic are apparently not uncommon, unlike the other materials. The more I read the more I'm seeing people placing these manifolds in their attic trying to keep short runs to an attic water heater.
An attic flood with no one home for a day is probably a lot more expensive than even a foundational pipe burst of any material.
Obviously you and I are on the same page...it may be once in 10-20 year failure but here we are...
My friend is custom building and I sent him my drama to prevent his builder doing anything but insulated runs and ground level manifold access.
And yeah I see an elbow on the hot water that makes me nervous. Other than pipe insulation, anything else you'd recommend? I see thermostatic controlled heated tape for fairly cheap. Could have a small heating element like that with the insulation.
That's how my pex is run
Yea, some is under the blown in insulation.Is it run exposed at the appliance like my mine?
All the freeze is at the uninsulated area facing the soffit vents. So if run in the attic through that insulation and then manifold downstairs I don't think it would freeze.