
Originally Posted by
speedball1
Antipode, What type of joints are you testing? Copper and compression or black iron and threaded joints. As a rule once the gas line's pressured up the plumber won't leave in the middle of the test without testing all the joints. What makes your job different? Regards, Tom
Black pipe and threaded joints.
The plumber got there at 6pm and stayed through 9. His partner took over this morning. I got hosed. Huge.
What happened was he pressurized the line, sprayed the bubbles, and kept finding the most minuscule leaks. Barely noticeable. Like, I couldn't really see them. They seemed like just the natural popping of tiny bubbles. No big leaks, no big bubbles anywhere. (He did not have the same electronic sniffer the gas company had. He pressurized the line to 4 pounds; the meter says maximum of 5.)
So he unthreaded, cleaned, and re-sealed each joint that he saw a leak on -- 4 or so. But his gauge kept dropping pressure to 3 pounds.
This morning, his partner continues with the remaining 4 joints; same story. Finally with one particularly obstructed T-joint left, he decided to try a new gauge, thinking his original one was broken.
Viola! No pressure drop.
So I said "does that mean the other joints were fine?" He says "no" because the soap still showed leaks.
This whole experience has me furious. (Not to mention that the original gas company test did NOT show a leak reading, but because we -- not him -- smelled a slight odor, he locked the gas line until a plumber came out.)