Speaking of manifolds.   Looking at building vs buying.   Thoughts?

>From my Android....

________________________________
From: CnC-List <cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com> on behalf of Dave Godwin via 
CnC-List <cnc-list@cnc-list.com>
Sent: Saturday, February 2, 2019 7:13:35 AM
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Cc: Dave Godwin
Subject: Re: Stus-List Replacing Water Lines...

I replaced all of the original grey plastic pipe in our boat. With the 
exception of a section where someone (ahem, looks at self…) ran a screw through 
it, it was perfectly serviceable, However, since I am replacing the fixtures in 
the head and the galley and have adde a transom-mounted cockpit shower I 
replaced all of it.

I used 1/2” SeaTech polyethylene tubing and associated fittings. The job was 
fairly easy to do and allowed for the building of a simple manifold on the 
pressure side of the system for the hot and cold outflows. The best thing that 
I did was purchase the pipe cutters to insure a clean, 90-degree cut on the 
ends.

Pictures available upon request.

Regards,
Dave Godwin
1982 C&C 37 - Ronin
Reedville - Chesapeake Bay
Ronin’s Overdue Refit<http://roninrebuild.blogspot.com/>

On Feb 2, 2019, at 1:57 AM, sender via CnC-List 
<cnc-list@cnc-list.com<mailto:cnc-list@cnc-list.com>> wrote:

The original grey, opaque plastic pipe that was commonplace in the late 70s & 
early 80s was polybutylene.

My understanding is the issue with this material is in residential use it split 
open causing a flood, in situations where pressures AND temperatures are high 
(180F).  It was taken off the market and companies were, and still are 
reluctant to make compatible fittings out of liability fears.  Having said 
that, I've kept the poly-b in my boat as it unlikely to fail since my my water 
is only periodically under pressure, its only 40 psi, and it never gets really 
hot.  if it was in my house, I'd remove it.

Vinyl tubing tends to shrink, yellow and harden up over time.

I'd do 1/4" or 3/8" pex if I was running new, but not sharkbites for fittings, 
there are lots of other compression fitting available at lower cost.

Just my $0.02
Eric

On Wed, Jan 30, 2019 at 7:07 AM David via CnC-List 
<cnc-list@cnc-list.com<mailto:cnc-list@cnc-list.com>> wrote:
I am sure this has been gone over before...so please indulge me.

Replacing, re-designing, water lines in 1981 40-2.  Pex is the obvious choice.  
 Are there less obvious (and have cheaper tools required to install) choices?

Has anyone improved on the original design?   I am thinking of adding easier 
accessible manifolds and an additional line for antifreeze and blowing out 
water.

Thanks in advance.

David F. Risch, J. D.
Gulf Stream Associates, LLC
(401) 419-4650
_______________________________________________

Thanks everyone for supporting this list with your contributions.  Each and 
every one is greatly appreciated.  If you want to support the list - use PayPal 
to send contribution --   https://www.paypal.me/stumurray

_______________________________________________

Thanks everyone for supporting this list with your contributions.  Each and 
every one is greatly appreciated.  If you want to support the list - use PayPal 
to send contribution --   https://www.paypal.me/stumurray


_______________________________________________

Thanks everyone for supporting this list with your contributions.  Each and 
every one is greatly appreciated.  If you want to support the list - use PayPal 
to send contribution --   https://www.paypal.me/stumurray

Reply via email to