PVC Pipe? In a straight line?
If so you have my sympathy! Seriously because I have 600 feet of the ...stuff... myself. I can't be rid of it sooner, but the poly ethelene stuff I was going to use has been mysteriously removed as a product for water mains.(as far as I can tell anyway) I may go with copper wrapped in plastic sleeves. We'll see. The PVC held this year (so far). Last year it busted jsut before an ice storm. Yay. I got the hole dug before the storm hit, but I had to do the repairs in it. Yay.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Expansion and contraction. PVC pipe has a higher expansion and contraction rate than metallic pipe. The rate translates into an expansion of 3.36 inches for every 100 feet with a temperature change of 100 F. Where PVC pipe is subjected to severe temperature fluctuations, provisions must be made for expansion and contraction. This can be accomplished by use of expansion joints or offset piping arrangements.
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quoted from
http://www.vinylbydesign.com/site/page.asp?TrackID=&VID=1&CID=73&DID=80
Okay so that means that for your roughly 2640 feet of line, if you installed it at 80 degrees, at 60 degrees it would want to be about 1.5 feet shorter. Of course where it shrinks and doesn't is up to so many factors as to be impossible to tell.
If you are going to use PVC, you need to find a way to give it some slack. I would suggest making it in zig-zagged sections 4 straight pieces long, then have a piece made of some threaded female and male adapters plus some 90 degrees so that when you are done there is a bit of play both directions. A good wrapping of teflon tape will keep it leak free.
If the pipe chills enough, it will either pull out of your slip couplings. I assume they are glued. The gluing process is very important. Of course, with a straight (or nearly so) long run with good glued joints you'll just snap the pipe in two if it contracts enough...
There are probably many other ways to provide slack for the pipe so it doesn't cause you grief.
Best of luck!