Thank you! this is exactly what I was looking for. Explained very straight forward. Got caught in the Texas freeze and busted a Grey pipe. Going to swap the line out with Pex for repair
What is the name of the tool or what does it look like that I need to crimp the transition piece from Poly B copper color ring fitting to the black ring PEX as shown in your video? Thank you for your helpful video
Where can I purchase these specal transition pieces? I am in the middle of re plumbing my bathroom and my general contractor guy did not mention this so I need to get these ASAP!
@@TheBuildingExpert I just bought some poly B to pex sharkbites on Amazon. The seller told me the sharkbites for poly B come in different colors after I asked him why the coupling was blue he sold me but labeled poly B. Is this possible??
I can’t find the adapter for 3/8 poly going to 1/2 pex. I’m currently disconnected. Most of house is 3/4 poly. Just came across this 3/8 poly and it’s screwing me up. Any help would be GREATLY appreciated.
I had the same issue. I was able to get a 3/8 PEX to 3/8 PolyB fitting. Then after a couple inches of 3/8 PEX I used a 3/8 PEX to 1/2 PEX fitting to complete the transition to 1/2 PEX. Not as nice as a 3/8 PolyB to 1/2 PEX fitting, but I couldn't find those.
The issue is not the PEX ring. Poly-B has thinner walls, and the PEX ring will not fuller compress. To counter this effect, the poly-B side of the coupling (more ridges) has a slightly larger outside diameter (OD). Because of the OD being larger, the ring has less room to move, to crimp down. Same goes for stainless steel rings. You simple need the larger OD of the coupling to make it all work. Before applying water pressure, you will know if the ring (or crimp clamp) has tightened all of the way. Should be obvious. Poly-B is a pain in the pahtutty, but with the correction transition pieces, you'll be up and running smoothly. Hope that helps. (PS not a fan of the sharkbite options.) Pro contractor here.
first of all thanks for the info. question i have heard all bad side of polyb but why we keep some polyb in the house water supply system instead of switching all into PEX. I have a manufatured home with all polyb pipe water supply and am studying to replace them all with DIY
ive had poly b for over 30 years , and my experience was the cone gaskets at the faucets leaked early on. Did have 2 other leaks at the places where the pipe curved, but thats it.
Replace it all. The fittings are most likely to burst, especially if there is a lot of chlorine in your water supply. So in the video, the creator removed the risky couplings angle stops, but left the tubular piping, which is a huge improvement and good move if you dont have access to repipe everything. That said, replace it all, it may last 20years plus with no problem, but the burst fitting will flood worse than a pinhole joint. The pipes are timebombs.
@@looseforward phht, 30 years not a dribble , all metal connectors. Major problems in the SW US, where the pipes are run in attics etc. Different story in Canada where the pipes are installed behind insulation. BTW all plumbing fails including copper
in North Carolina, many of the main service feeds are still (yep) Poly-B. We transition immediately, but still need to be done on a regular basis. Also, some internal runs need to be converted, rather than torn out. It happens.
How can you show such nonsense? Some Chinese pipe as polybutylene? The best polybutylene, the one important for the economy, is produced by members of the World Association of Producers of Polybutylene Systems. Most of them test their products at the KIWA Institute. There are no KIWA markings or any European standards on this tube shown. Total nonsense.
Thank you! this is exactly what I was looking for. Explained very straight forward. Got caught in the Texas freeze and busted a Grey pipe. Going to swap the line out with Pex for repair
glad it helped.
Well done, this will help me a lot. Thanks from Andre in Calgary Alberta
Thank you so much. You saved me from a major headache.
More videos please! God bless you
What is the name of the tool or what does it look like that I need to crimp the transition piece from Poly B copper color ring fitting to the black ring PEX as shown in your video?
Thank you for your helpful video
Great video
thank you
Where can I purchase these specal transition pieces? I am in the middle of re plumbing my bathroom and my general contractor guy did not mention this so I need to get these ASAP!
Thanks for this clear explination. This is the best video on youtube for this topic!
Thank you so much!
I've only seen the plastic poly b fittings fail. Not the pipe itself.
I've also seen shark bite 3/4" fittings fit on poly b quite well.
Do u have any waterline installations??? For single storey house to a multiple storey..heheh..Tnx!
Can you use a Pex Crimp Tool on the Poly B ring?
The same tool crimps pex or poly.
@@TheBuildingExpert I just bought some poly B to pex sharkbites on Amazon. The seller told me the sharkbites for poly B come in different colors after I asked him why the coupling was blue he sold me but labeled poly B.
Is this possible??
Thank for the simple video. Simple information, hard to find. Well presented.
Glad you enjoyed it!
I can’t find the adapter for 3/8 poly going to 1/2 pex. I’m currently disconnected. Most of house is 3/4 poly. Just came across this 3/8 poly and it’s screwing me up. Any help would be GREATLY appreciated.
I had the same issue. I was able to get a 3/8 PEX to 3/8 PolyB fitting. Then after a couple inches of 3/8 PEX I used a 3/8 PEX to 1/2 PEX fitting to complete the transition to 1/2 PEX. Not as nice as a 3/8 PolyB to 1/2 PEX fitting, but I couldn't find those.
Are you certain that a pex crimp ring will not fit over polybutylene? I just need to replace a Tee for now, and later re-plumb. Thanks!
The issue is not the PEX ring. Poly-B has thinner walls, and the PEX ring will not fuller compress. To counter this effect, the poly-B side of the coupling (more ridges) has a slightly larger outside diameter (OD). Because of the OD being larger, the ring has less room to move, to crimp down. Same goes for stainless steel rings. You simple need the larger OD of the coupling to make it all work. Before applying water pressure, you will know if the ring (or crimp clamp) has tightened all of the way. Should be obvious. Poly-B is a pain in the pahtutty, but with the correction transition pieces, you'll be up and running smoothly. Hope that helps. (PS not a fan of the sharkbite options.) Pro contractor here.
first of all thanks for the info. question i have heard all bad side of polyb but why we keep some polyb in the house water supply system instead of switching all into PEX. I have a manufatured home with all polyb pipe water supply and am studying to replace them all with DIY
ive had poly b for over 30 years , and my experience was the cone gaskets at the faucets leaked early on. Did have 2 other leaks at the places where the pipe curved, but thats it.
Replace it all. The fittings are most likely to burst, especially if there is a lot of chlorine in your water supply. So in the video, the creator removed the risky couplings angle stops, but left the tubular piping, which is a huge improvement and good move if you dont have access to repipe everything. That said, replace it all, it may last 20years plus with no problem, but the burst fitting will flood worse than a pinhole joint. The pipes are timebombs.
@@looseforward phht, 30 years not a dribble , all metal connectors. Major problems in the SW US, where the pipes are run in attics etc. Different story in Canada where the pipes are installed behind insulation. BTW all plumbing fails including copper
Ura gem
Best thing is to get rid of al the poly-B pipe & you wont have to worry about these special couplings.
in North Carolina, many of the main service feeds are still (yep) Poly-B. We transition immediately, but still need to be done on a regular basis. Also, some internal runs need to be converted, rather than torn out. It happens.
@Lets_Go_Canes is there a lot of work with changing poly b to pex?
How can you show such nonsense? Some Chinese pipe as polybutylene?
The best polybutylene, the one important for the economy, is produced by members of the World Association of Producers of Polybutylene Systems. Most of them test their products at the KIWA Institute. There are no KIWA markings or any European standards on this tube shown. Total nonsense.
What is nonsense about it? Many homes in the South were plumbed with Poly-B for many years, and are failing now. Calm down.