He's doing some remodeling on a flipper house he bought out in the country. The previous plumber used CPVC piping for the water-supply lines.
Here's what my friend sent, "I capped some 1/2" CPVC pipe with Sharkbite caps so I could keep a primitive bathroom going for myself. That stuff shattered like glass as I tried to use my battery Dewalt recip saw on it.
I ended up using a hacksaw with a 24-point blade and going very gently to get it to cut without splitting. This house was built in 1988.
The CPVC has had crawl space exposure its entire life, but still I remember 1988 as not being that long ago regarding a site built home. I could snap a piece only 4 or 5 inches long like a pencil."
What's your takeaway here? If you're at all familiar with CPVC, when it's new it's NOT brittle. You can bend it and it will not snap.
If your home has CPVC water-supply lines, then be sure they're not under any stress and you'll have a flood.
Talk to Me Before not After
Richard lives in Columbus, OH. This is another teaching moment you should never forget.
He emailed me about four days ago and said, "As part of a recent roofing job, I also had ridge vents installed. I'm now considering whether I have adequate venting in the eaves of the house.
I've found plenty of info about matching the vent capacity of the eaves vs. the ridge vent, but nothing addresses anything like the built-in roof vent. Any suggestions?"
I grinned at my computer monitor and said out loud, "Richard you should have researched this BEFORE you even called roofers to get quotes. You should have read all my roof ventilation columns. You maybe should have done one of my 15-Minute phone calls."
I responded and told Richard to go read all my past work about turbine vents.
Now he has to bring back the roofer to add them. Such an extra unnecessary expense!
That's enough for this Sunday. My health is continuing to improve. My wife Kathy and I beat Covid and have the best natural immunity you can get. WOOT!
Tim Carter
Founder - www.AsktheBuilder.com
BEST DARN CLEANER - www.StainSolver.com
Train Telegrapher - www.W3ATB.com
Do It Right, Not Over!
P.S. Are you getting ready to have a new roof installed? Asphalt shingles? You'd do well to READ my short epose' Roofing Ripoff book. CLICK or TAP HERE to read the first few chapters for FREE.