Kays Supply
Veteran Member
If anyone else has more experience at this that me, I will give to there advice. If not, I have been plumbing for 30+ years. If you want the least trouble with this, you will run the feed line to the hydrant from inside the house/barn whatever. Put a shut off valve on it. If the hydrant gets damaged on a cold winter day you just shut the valve and fix it when the weather is better. If it is on your house line ahead of the house you will be out there fixing it rain or shine so the momma can take a bath.
Use soft copper about three or 4 feet long to connect to the bottom of the hydrant. It will give quite a bit before failing. PVC will snap at the threads if the hydrant is torqued much at all. There are fittings made by McDonald that are brass compression. They can connect to the PVC without glue so you can get back to using it and don't have to dry it out to make a glue joint if you must connect ahead of the house. I would still put a valve between the house line and the hydrant even if it is under ground.
Anchor it to some kind of post for sure. A mower or lifestock can do a real damage quick.
Use soft copper about three or 4 feet long to connect to the bottom of the hydrant. It will give quite a bit before failing. PVC will snap at the threads if the hydrant is torqued much at all. There are fittings made by McDonald that are brass compression. They can connect to the PVC without glue so you can get back to using it and don't have to dry it out to make a glue joint if you must connect ahead of the house. I would still put a valve between the house line and the hydrant even if it is under ground.
Anchor it to some kind of post for sure. A mower or lifestock can do a real damage quick.