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-   -   Fixing an elbow on a pipe against an outside wall? (https://www.askmehelpdesk.com/showthread.php?t=13596)

  • Oct 11, 2005, 07:59 PM
    jkarp
    Fixing an elbow on a pipe against an outside wall?
    I have a leak on an outside pipe coming from the 90 degree elbow bend (I think). I have wrapped it in that hardening tape, but it still leaks (much less now). I would like to fix the leak completely, but here are my problems.
    The pipe is right up against a wall, so getting around it is pretty hard. Below is a picture of the pipe. What about a 90 degree compression fitting? The problem with that sounds like I would need to cut the pipe with a pipe cutter and I wouldn't be able to do that seeing as the pipe is against a wall, right?
    Does anyone have any other ideas? This is driving me crazy!

    Thanks... josh

    http://www.jother.com/misc/pipe.jpg
  • Oct 11, 2005, 08:09 PM
    clukkes
    How about chipping the wall around the pipe?
  • Oct 11, 2005, 08:17 PM
    jkarp
    Thanks for the reply. I chipped away enough to get the tape around there, but that didn't fix it completely. I can chip away more, but I want to know what the best method of fixing this would be before I go chip away the whole thing!

    By the way, I chipped away more wall and wrapped more tape than shown in the picture above.

    ... josh
  • Oct 11, 2005, 08:26 PM
    clukkes
    To bad you just can't redo the piping... seems like a good time to.
  • Oct 11, 2005, 08:30 PM
    labman
    Is it a water line, a drain, or what? How big is it? I don't remember seeing compression elbows meant for iron pipe. They do make straight unions. It wouldn't be elegant, but you could cut both pipes and put nipples in a new elbow, and connect both of them with compression fittings. You could remove the tape wrap and cut the lower pipe. Likely the other one would swing out a little from the wall, enough to cut it with a recip saw or a hacksaw. Compression fittings do not need a straight, smooth cut.

    If it is a drain, I would be very tempted to try to find big enough plastic tubing to slip over it. A couple of hose clamps would complete the job.
  • Oct 12, 2005, 07:52 AM
    speedball1
    This looks like a 3/4" water pipe. If this were my call I'd dig or break out a hole under the pipe on the floor and cut the bad piece out leaving the unthreaded end bare. If the elbo was good I would then remove the bad piece of pipe from the elbo.
    I would then slip a dresser coupling over the bare end of the pipe and a threaded nipple,( after first taping the threads with teflon tape) into the elbo. You may then tighten both compression nuts on the dresser coupling for a solid connection.
    If the elbo's bad I would cut the vertical pipe back to the nearest threaded fitting and convert to PVC using a male PVC adapter. You may then replace the pipe and elbo with PVC if cold and CPVC if hot and connect using the dresser coupling. Good luck, Tom

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