PDA

View Full Version : What do you call this plastic type of water pipe.



WilliamGreen
05-18-2013, 07:56 AM
Came across this clear plastic pipe in a home. Is it a form of pex. the connecters are plastic fittings. What do you call this type of plumbing.
2879828799

Lon Henderson
05-18-2013, 08:00 AM
WIRSBO is the brand that I've used. Pronounced wersbo. Great stuff. It requires a special tool for the connections.

WilliamGreen
05-18-2013, 08:22 AM
WIRSBO is the brand that I've used. Pronounced wersbo. Great stuff. It requires a special tool for the connections.

Thanks that helps a lot.

Jerry Peck
05-18-2013, 09:56 AM
WIRSBO is the brand that I've used. Pronounced wersbo. Great stuff. It requires a special tool for the connections.

Uponor now. ;)

Rick Goble
05-20-2013, 11:21 AM
The brand I see most often in the Phoenix area is "aqua pex".

Kyle Smith
05-20-2013, 02:21 PM
SharkBite make a lot of pex now. The fitting is a ProPEX Expansion fitting. Good stuff.

Last I hate seeing that unsupported bend after the fitting. Especially with how stiff 3/4" pex is..

28803

Rod Butler
05-20-2013, 03:14 PM
Came across this clear plastic pipe in a home. Is it a form of pex. the connecters are plastic fittings. What do you call this type of plumbing.
2879828799

Sorry to jump off topic, but what is that yellow thing to the left?

Jerry DiGiovanni
05-20-2013, 06:03 PM
Looks like polybutlepropoline. Not sure if I spelled it right. WE have a lot of that here.

Alain Charron
05-20-2013, 08:02 PM
I personally think it is safe to just mention it as being "PEX" as opposed to "AQUA-PEX" or "WIRSBO-PEX"... As long as it is NOT POLYBUTYLENE.

Frazier Jeffery
05-20-2013, 08:03 PM
Looks like polybutlepropoline. Not sure if I spelled it right. WE have a lot of that here.
What are you guys talking about this pipe is PEX the other comments are the fastening systems and brand names It should be supported every 32 inches on horizontal joist runs extremely durable if not a rodent issue or exposed to sunlight

Marshall Brown
05-21-2013, 06:11 AM
Could someone clue me in as to what PEX is the abbreviation for. I was told once that it was the abbreviation for the French name for cross stranded polyethylene, but I have been told a lot of things, not all of which were true.

Dom D'Agostino
05-21-2013, 02:49 PM
Could someone clue me in as to what PEX is the abbreviation for. I was told once that it was the abbreviation for the French name for cross stranded polyethylene, but I have been told a lot of things, not all of which were true.

PE is polyethylene, and the X is for crosslinked.

From Uponor site:

"Wirsbo emerged as the leader in the polyethylene pipe industry in 1968 when German inventor, Dr. Thomas Engel, developed a method to chemically crosslink polyethylene (PEX). A year later, Wirsbo successfully developed a viable manufacturing process, and in 1984, Wirsbo was incorporated. "

Marshall Brown
05-22-2013, 05:04 AM
Thanks

Jerry Peck
05-22-2013, 07:00 AM
PE is polyethylene, and the X is for crosslinked.

From Uponor site:

"Wirsbo emerged as the leader in the polyethylene pipe industry in 1968 when German inventor, Dr. Thomas Engel, developed a method to chemically crosslink polyethylene (PEX). A year later, Wirsbo successfully developed a viable manufacturing process, and in 1984, Wirsbo was incorporated. "

As the Uponor representative explained it so we (at the meeting) could get a visual image of it): Those Solo plastic cups are made of polyethylene with no cross-linking, you know how you would take those cups and bend the top, cracking it, then rip it straight down the side of the cup? That what would happen to the piping if it were not cross-linked. That was solved by adding in thousands of tiny men who clasp arms together very tightly and keep the polyethylene from tearing like those cups ... :) ... actually, if I remember correctly, it was the addition of hydrogen-peroxide to the polyethylene which causes the molecules to grab each other and hold tight.

George Hallaron
05-22-2013, 05:22 PM
As the Uponor representative explained it so we (at the meeting) could get a visual image of it): Those Solo plastic cups are made of polyethylene with no cross-linking, you know how you would take those cups and bend the top, cracking it, then rip it straight down the side of the cup? That what would happen to the piping if it were not cross-linked. That was solved by adding in thousands of tiny men who clasp arms together very tightly and keep the polyethylene from tearing like those cups ... :) ... actually, if I remember correctly, it was the addition of hydrogen-peroxide to the polyethylene which causes the molecules to grab each other anWow! That's a great visualization Jerry. Do you know of any documentation on that thesis that I might aquire for some light bedtime reading?:Dd hold tight.

Wow! That's a great visualization Jerry. Do you know of any documentation on that thesis that I might aquire for some light bedtime reading?:D

Jerry Peck
05-22-2013, 05:32 PM
Wow! That's a great visualization Jerry. Do you know of any documentation on that thesis that I might aquire for some light bedtime reading?:D

I didn't get the names of all those men, probably small relatives of either the Munchkins or the Kebbler Elves. ;)