teejk
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Mar 3, 2012
- Messages
- 1,775
- Location
- Merrillan, WI
- Tractor
- JD 2020, IH CC 1250, Ariens 926 Snowthrower
Even with PEX you have the copper connections. I think only having small sections of copper means the acid gets to focus on these fittings. I had a friend switch from copper to PEX and the PEX fittings are failing quicker than the copper did. You need to get the ph right to protect all of your equipment. You could also go to CPVC and be all plastic, but you still need to fix the ph to protect everything else.
I think PEX uses mostly brass or stainless connectors now (at least in my house) after some of the early fittings failed. But same can be said for CPVC where the glue was failing. And in a high acid water situation, I would be leary (PVC is PVC).
I would certainly recommend Pex where the tubing is buried behind drywall. Locating a leak (usually a horizontal run evidenced by one of those brown stains on the ceiling where sweating in a patch will cause one to lose religion), having to cut the drywall out, fix the leak, replace the drywall, apply/sand the compound several times over several days. Not fun and a big mess.
But I agree. Ph of domestic water needs to be higher than a 5 (a myriad of sites out there saying 6.5 and up). Since the OP had the water tested, I'll assume it was on the well side and not a hot water tap. So back to the original question! What's the newest idea that won't break the bank?