213 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
213 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3614
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Title: HPR3614: Everything You Always Wanted to Know About PEX Part 02- The Joy of PEX - What is it and how is it us
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3614/hpr3614.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 02:11:58
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,614 for Thursday 9 June 2022.
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Today's show is entitled, Everything You Always Wanted to Know About PEX Part.
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It is hosted by Trey and is about 14 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is.
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It is about PEX and how it is used.
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Welcome back to the series, Everything You Always Wanted to Know About PEX.
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This is Part 2, The Joy of PEX.
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What it is and how it is used.
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My name is Trey.
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Welcome on this journey.
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So what is PEX?
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According to Wikipedia, cross-linked polyethylene tubing is commonly abbreviated PEX.
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That's Papa Echo X-ray or XPE, X-ray Papa Echo or X-LPE, X-ray Lima Papa Echo.
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It's very confusing.
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I'm putting a link to the Wikipedia article for cross-linked polyethylene in the show
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notes.
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We will call it PEX.
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This tubing is made out of cross-linked polyethylene chains.
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Comes in type A, type B, and type C, and these differ based on the process used to make
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them and the resulting properties of the tubing produced.
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PEX is used for a variety of different products, including insulation and high voltage, high
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tension electrical cables, domestic water pipes, which is what we'll be talking about in
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this series, irrigation and hydroponic systems, natural gas and oil pipes, and even chemical
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handling and storage systems, so it is a very versatile product.
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Let's talk a little bit about its use for domestic plumbing.
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The advantages of PEX for domestic plumbing are wide-ranging.
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The first is it's flexible, making it easy to install and fish through walls and crawl
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spaces in getting it into areas where you might otherwise have difficulty with a long
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rigid pipe.
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It will stretch a little bit, making it less likely to rupture if water contained within
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PEX freezes.
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I'm sure you've heard about or maybe even experienced a pipe bursting when it freezes.
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As you may know, water when it freezes expands when it transitions from liquid to a solid.
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That's why ice floats on top of water because it's less dense than the water itself.
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It expands.
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Well, if it expands in something like a pipe, that pressure has to go somewhere and oftentimes
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it will result in the pipe bursting, but because PEX will stretch a little bit, if the water
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inside PEX freezes, it is less likely to rupture the tubing.
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It does not rust and it does not easily corrode.
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We'll talk about some circumstances when it can corrode a little bit later in this episode.
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It's also much, much less expensive than copper.
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Copper is very expensive right now and copper tubing is significantly more expensive than
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would be PEX if you're doing repairs and replacements or even a new install.
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New installs and houses now use PEX instead of copper.
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It comes in multiple colors for easy identification.
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For example, when I did my install, I used blue for cold water, red for hot water, making
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it easy for me to see which was which.
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You can also see yellow often times used for gas lines and a variety of different things
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like that.
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It also comes in clear, so many different colors.
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It's easy to cut.
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This is a simple hand cutter to simply snip it off.
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It's very easy to cut.
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As opposed to like a steel pipe, which you might have to use a hacksaw to cut or copper pipe,
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which you'd have to use a tubing cutter and twist it around and around and around tight
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and get each time until you cut through the pipe with PEX.
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It's much easier just to snip and you're ready to go.
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The connectors are easy to put on and this is the process for that will vary depending
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on the type of PEX that you're using.
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Let's talk about this a little bit.
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PEX type A is what we call expansion PEX.
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It is designed for expanding to go over a connector.
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For example, you would take the end of the PEX that you want to hook to your connector
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and you would slide a sleeve that's also made of PEX.
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It's just a little bit larger in diameter over the end where the connector is going to
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go.
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You have a double layer of PEX now.
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Then you get the special tool that inserts into the PEX and expands a specific amount
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and it'll expand and rotate, expand and rotate, expand and rotate.
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It's stretching that whole end of the tubing.
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Then you simply slide that expanded end over the PEX A connector and you have to use a
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PEX A style connector with PEX A tubing and then let it shrink back to normal size and
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it will create a seal.
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I'm including a link in the show notes showing that process in a YouTube video.
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The advantages of PEX A are it's fast and easy to install.
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You can install it in tight places since the tool does not have to be right in the tight
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place where your connector is.
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You can have the tool in the end of the tubing out, stretch it, then put it in there quickly
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slide it onto the connector, let it shrink back up again.
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So that makes it very easy to install in a lot of places where it would be more difficult
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to install a different type of tubing.
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PEX A is also more resistant to damage from kinks if it is bent too tight or into too
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tight or radius.
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With PEX A, if it does kink, you can straighten it back out again, warm it up with a little
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bit of a heat gun and it will return back to its normal shape and you're good to go.
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You don't want to overheat it obviously, but a little bit of warmth can straighten that
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out.
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It's also more resistant to damage from freezing.
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We talked about that, you know, the PEX expanding if something inside of it freezes and expands.
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PEX A will expand more than PEX B will without rupturing.
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So those are the advantages of it.
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The disadvantages are the tool to actually expand the end is very expensive.
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Most of the times I've seen it run anywhere from 300 to 600 US dollars for the tool.
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So in the United States, PEX A is generally a professional plumbers type of product.
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And you can get the PEX A connectors from professional plumbers and from professional plumbing
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supplyhouses, but they're not as available in your typical hardware and home improvement
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store.
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They do not have as much of a variety of them.
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That's why in my case I ended up choosing PEX B and we'll get into that in another
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episode.
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So let's talk about PEX B. PEX B is what we call crimp PEX.
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So it does not stretch to go over the end of the connector.
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Instead the process for putting a connector on it is you take a metal ring or a band
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and you place it around the end of the PEX B tubing that you're wanting to connect to
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your connector.
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Then the tubing is and the band are slipped over the end of the desired, you know, PEX B
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connector and you have to use a PEX B type connector with PEX B type tubing.
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Then a special tool is used to crimp that metal ring or a different tool may be used to
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tighten the metal band, creating a seal between the PEX and the PEX connector.
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Again I'm going to include a link in the show nuts showing you how PEX B is crimped
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onto a connector.
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The advantages of PEX B is it's fast and easy to install.
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It's a little bit slower than PEX A but it's still fast and easy to install.
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The crimping tools are much less expensive than the tools for PEX A and there's a higher
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availability and a wider range of connectors at typical home improvement stores in the
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United States.
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The disadvantages of PEX B is if PEX B is kinked that portion is no longer safe to use
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and it must be replaced.
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It is also more difficult to get connections done in tight places because oftentimes the
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crimping tools require a lot of pressure and the handles will expand and contract a
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significant amount, almost like a bolt cutter.
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You really have to swing them out wide and bring them in far to get the ring crimped properly.
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It can be difficult to do that in tight places.
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I ended up investing in a battery powered crimping tool that could really get into
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tighter places and made that process much, much easier.
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Also that can be remedied if you choose to use shark bite press on fittings for your
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PEX and another disadvantage is it is less resistant to damage from freezing like we
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talked about earlier.
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All of the connections for PEX A and PEX B can be easily removed if you want to reuse
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the connectors.
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So you simply cut off the ring or cut off the band or cut off the particular section of
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PEX that you're working on and then cut off the crimping, remove the PEX and then reuse
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the connector as long as you don't cut in deep enough that you damage the ridges on
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the connectors.
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These are many of the advantages of using PEX.
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We talked about the advantages of PEX A and PEX B. Are there any disadvantages to using
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PEX?
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Well, there are.
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The first is that it is damaged by ultraviolet light from sunlight or even from ultraviolet
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light from LED or fluorescent lighting.
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You'll want to check your manufacturer's specifications to see how it is rated and
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what it is what it can be exposed to.
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Most PEX is typically rated for only 30 to 60 days of sun exposure before it begins
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to deteriorate.
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Then what happens is the PEX can become susceptible to corrosion by chlorine in water and it can
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become brittle and you really do not want to use PEX that has been exposed to UV light
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or sunlight for any length of time.
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I will include two links in the show notes for some videos and information about PEX and
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UV light.
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As a result, you'll want to make sure that when you do install it, any sections that
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are going to be exposed to light are covered so that the light is not hitting the PEX directly.
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The long-term durability of PEX is really yet to be determined when we think about the
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fact that we've used copper pipe in houses for hundreds of years and have hundreds of
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years worth of experience with what the copper will do over time and what it will work for
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and what it won't work for.
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We just don't have that much time with PEX, but we're getting more and more all the
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time and learning a lot and it does seem to be a much more durable replacement for copper.
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We're also that it's non-conductive so it will not make for an electrical ground.
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If you have copper pipes in your house that you're using to ground certain portions of
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your electrical system and then you replace a section of that copper pipe with PEX between
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where you've made that electrical connection and where the copper actually goes out of your
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house into the ground, it could create a problem.
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You no longer have that electrical connectivity there.
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You'll be aware of that.
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If you're making changes from copper to PEX, you'll have to go through and make sure
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that you're not putting your house at a electrical safety hazard because of the way some of your
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grounds may be connected.
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It's also not rigid.
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It must be supported.
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In fact, there are rules for how often it must be supported.
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You'll want to check your local plumbing codes to see how often it must be supported over
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a horizontal stretch and how often it must be supported for a vertical stretch, different
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things like that.
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Make sure you look into those and take a good plan to make sure that you support it properly
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because the weight of the water inside it can cause it to bend.
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Speaking of bending, it can only bend a certain radius before it kinks.
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There are guides that you can get that can cause that you can run it through to make sure
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that it does not bend any further than it's supposed to and they help a lot.
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You can install little elbows if you have to make really tight bends.
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You can just crimp on an elbow and go from there.
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PEX may induce an odd taste to your water for the first few weeks that you're using it.
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I noticed that in my install for the first maybe two to three weeks every morning, I would
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run the water for a minute to flush all the water that had been sitting in the PEX
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overnight out and then it was when I drank the water, it did not taste odd.
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After a month, you could not even tell the difference in the taste.
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So be aware that it can have a short-term negative influence on the taste of your water.
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But some people say that that taste is just the tip of the iceberg and that PEX might
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leak toxins into your water.
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I've seen articles that support that.
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I've seen articles that refute that.
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Do your own research.
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I'm including a link with each position in the show notes.
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If you're going to use PEX, research it for yourself.
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Come to your own conclusions before you go ahead and install it.
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Well, we've reached the end of part two, the joy of PEX.
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Thank you for listening and stay tuned for part three and I wish you well.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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Today's show was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording podcasts, click on our contribute link to find out how
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easy it leads.
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The hosting for HPR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive
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and our sims.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
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License.
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