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[GMCnet] PEX tubing questions [message #365221] Sat, 03 July 2021 09:17 Go to next message
Stu Rasmussen is currently offline  Stu Rasmussen   United States
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Registered: January 2019
Location: Silverton, OR
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Senior Member

Reading the recent thread about changing 40 year old water lines for
PEX engendered two questions:

1: What size PEX would be suitable to get the same flow as the
existing piping?

2: Is PEX burst-resistant enough to re-route the replacement piping
under the coach (easy) instead of snaking it through the existing
routing (convoluted)? I'm thinking here about resistance to bursting
due to freezing.

Inquiring minds and all that . . . .

Stu

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Stu Rasmussen W7QJ Silverton, OR '77 Birchaven
Re: [GMCnet] PEX tubing questions [message #365237 is a reply to message #365221] Sun, 04 July 2021 00:00 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Green machine is currently offline  Green machine   Canada
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I redid all my water lines with half inch pex. Color coded blue and red. I didn't go under the coach but would have no problem doing it. Just put a drain cock at a low point and you'll be fine.

Shawn


Shawn Harris North Vancouver, Canada 1977 Palm Beach 403
Re: [GMCnet] PEX tubing questions [message #365297 is a reply to message #365221] Fri, 09 July 2021 09:07 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Richard RV   United States
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Stu,

3/8" and 1/2" are the two most common PEX line sizes, with 1/2" being the most common in residential construction. It may not be desirable to have high flow in an RV, particularly one with smaller holding tanks like a GMC. If you're frequently at campgrounds and hooked up to the sewer than flow rate and holding tank filling efficiency doesn't matter. Generally speaking, a 3/8" line will deliver good flow.

The 1/2" line will have a flow rate ~2.5x that of a 3/8" line. If you're planning on having an "instant water heater" it will require a higher flow rate to trigger the heat, which might be at the upper end (or beyond) what a 3/8" line can deliver.

I don't know that counting solely on the freeze resiliency of PEX is wise. Running the water lines under the coach means that they'll freeze sooner than if they're inside the coach. If the line freezes water won't flow. You could insulate and/or heat trace them to compensate if you're frequently camping in colder weather.

Of course you will still need to winterize the coach, and your drain valves will be at the lowest point and underneath the coach, so you'll have to get under the coach to winterize instead of doing it from inside.

Richard


'77 Birchaven TZE...777; '76 Palm Beach under construction; ‘76 Edgemont waiting its turn
Re: [GMCnet] PEX tubing questions [message #365315 is a reply to message #365221] Fri, 09 July 2021 20:35 Go to previous messageGo to next message
dsmithy is currently offline  dsmithy   United States
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Location: Lincoln Nebraska
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Stu,
I redid my '73 with half-inch pex and did not find it too difficult to get access and pull tubes without taking much apart. Yes, the over the ceiling runs were the worst but not bad. If you use whatever's existing as a puller it's not a difficult job. Can't speak for the differences between '73 and '77 for this task.
Doug


Douglas & Virginia Smith, dsmithy18 at gmail, Lincoln Nebraska, ’73 “Sequoia” since ‘95: "Wanabizo"; Quadrabag/6 wheel disks/3:70 final/Paterson QuadraJet/Thorley’s/Alloy wheels/Sundry other
[GMCnet] Re: PEX tubing questions [message #365320 is a reply to message #365315] Fri, 09 July 2021 23:00 Go to previous message
sgltrac is currently offline  sgltrac   United States
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I used 1/2” pex in The War Pig and it was fairly easy to pull into place.
The struggle I remember was bending long runs around corners. Yeah I
could’ve used a brass elbow and two more compression fittings but I wanted
to minimize the number of connections. The support bracket for pex 90s has
a pretty large radius.

Sully
Bellevue wa.

On Fri, Jul 9, 2021 at 6:35 PM Douglas Smith wrote:

> Stu,
> I redid my '73 with half-inch pex and did not find it too difficult to get
> access and pull tubes without taking much apart. Yes, the over the ceiling
> runs were the worst but not bad. If you use whatever's existing as a
> puller it's not a difficult job. Can't speak for the differences between
> '73 and
> '77 for this task.
> Doug
> --
> Douglas & Virginia Smith,
> dsmithy18 at gmail,
> Lincoln Nebraska,
> ’73 “Sequoia” since ‘95: "Wanabizo";
> Quadrabag/6 wheel disks/3:70 final/Paterson QuadraJet/Thorley’s/Alloy
> wheels/Sundry other
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
>
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Sully 77 Royale basket case. Future motorhome land speed record holder(bucket list) Seattle, Wa.
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