Richard
Elite Member
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2000
- Messages
- 4,997
- Location
- Knoxville, TN
- Tractor
- International 1066 Full sized JCB Loader/Backhoe and a John Deere 430 to mow with
We’re starting the process of finishing a full bath in the basement. Wife wants shower with some of body sprays. Because of that, I need to upsize to ¾” copper.
As my good luck would have it, copper pipe comes out of my water heater and heads right into this bathroom but it's stepped down immediately to 1/2" (at the water heater)
I figure I just swap out the stick and I'm done BUT...(time for my bad luck)
Right underneith some ductwork, is another "T" where the hot/cold lines turn and go to the kitchen. I don't have access to those unless I do some major rework on ducting (which I don't plan to do)
Here's my question (unless someone has a different idea)
What if I remove the 1/2" at the water heater, insert a "T" so I can pull 3/4" pipe all the way to the bathroom (leaving the 1/2" line intact). Insert yet another "T" and step right back down to 1/2" (at same water heater junction) so the kitchen run will be intact.
What will happen though is, on the OTHER side of the kitchen "T", I'll have to cut the pipe & cap it OR (and this is the thrust of my question)
Could I take what would become a dead leg (if I capped it), and just "T" it BACK into the 3/4" pipe that will be replacing it?
I don't see any reason why that won't work but perhaps I'm worrying to much about it. I just don't like the idea of a water pipe going off to nowhere and stopping. I'd like to bring it back into the pipe so it's always able to flow.
I'm not sure how clear all my gibberish might be.
I have a single line from water heater to this bathroom with a T coming off at a very difficult spot to reach. If I do the above, I'll have a second, parallel 3/4" line next to the 1/2". the 3/4 will fuel the bathroom and the 1/2 will stay connected to Kitchen. After the kitchen junction, I might run the 1/2" back into the 3/4" pipe. Any reason why I should or shouldn’t do this?
/forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif
As my good luck would have it, copper pipe comes out of my water heater and heads right into this bathroom but it's stepped down immediately to 1/2" (at the water heater)
I figure I just swap out the stick and I'm done BUT...(time for my bad luck)
Right underneith some ductwork, is another "T" where the hot/cold lines turn and go to the kitchen. I don't have access to those unless I do some major rework on ducting (which I don't plan to do)
Here's my question (unless someone has a different idea)
What if I remove the 1/2" at the water heater, insert a "T" so I can pull 3/4" pipe all the way to the bathroom (leaving the 1/2" line intact). Insert yet another "T" and step right back down to 1/2" (at same water heater junction) so the kitchen run will be intact.
What will happen though is, on the OTHER side of the kitchen "T", I'll have to cut the pipe & cap it OR (and this is the thrust of my question)
Could I take what would become a dead leg (if I capped it), and just "T" it BACK into the 3/4" pipe that will be replacing it?
I don't see any reason why that won't work but perhaps I'm worrying to much about it. I just don't like the idea of a water pipe going off to nowhere and stopping. I'd like to bring it back into the pipe so it's always able to flow.
I'm not sure how clear all my gibberish might be.
I have a single line from water heater to this bathroom with a T coming off at a very difficult spot to reach. If I do the above, I'll have a second, parallel 3/4" line next to the 1/2". the 3/4 will fuel the bathroom and the 1/2 will stay connected to Kitchen. After the kitchen junction, I might run the 1/2" back into the 3/4" pipe. Any reason why I should or shouldn’t do this?
/forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif