It sounds like that is the reason they make really big hammers.  Plumbing is 
about the last thing I like to do.  I would rather mud.
Dale
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: RJ 
  To: blindhandyman@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Monday, January 14, 2008 12:28 PM
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] I hate plumbing!


  It sounds as you didn't have to go out for your entertainment this weekend.
  Smile,
  RJ
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Dan Rossi 
  To: BlindHandyman@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Monday, January 14, 2008 13:39
  Subject: [BlindHandyMan] I hate plumbing!

  This weekend was spent in battle with the pipes. The war was waged on two 
  fronts, the kitchen faucet, and an unused toilet in the basement.

  the faucet had the upper hand for a while, but it now lays in many pieces 
  at the bottom of my trash. Score one for the blind guy!

  This was an old faucet with three separate mountings, one each for the two 
  taps, and one for the faucet itself. I spent a lot of time under the sink 
  with the mother of all basin wrenches trying to get the nuts off the taps 
  to no avail. I tried taking them out from above, but there was no way to 
  grab onto the little collars, which also happened to be puttied to the 
  sink surface. Much to Teresa's dismay, I, screaming that I would exact my 
  vengeance on the faucet, ran to the basement and retrieved my Dremel. 
  Several broken cutting disks later, after much prying, cursing and 
  snarling, the taps and faucet were removed from the sink and the sink 
  surface was not marred from the Dremel.

  Of course, after I slid the new faucet in place, the flex tubes attached 
  to the faucet were not long enough to reach the shut-offs under the sink. 
  That meant, not surprisingly, another trip to the store, but that had to 
  wait until Sunday.

  Sunday morning I took a closer look at the toilet in the basement. This 
  is a cruddy old toilet stuck in the corner of the basement with a plywood 
  wall on none side and a partial plywood door. These are very common in 
  Pittsburgh. The guts of the tank were completely rusted and broken and 
  since the shut-off to the toilet didn't actually shut the water off, there 
  had been a paint can wedged into the tank to keep the fill valve closed. 
  I had upgraded the paint can to a 20 pound dumbell but figured I should 
  probably fix the shut-off and take care of the tank guts while I was at 
  it.

  Off to the store. We found some flexible tubes to extend the faucet lines 
  and I installed them as soon as we got home. Had a lot of trouble getting 
  the sprayer attachment threaded onto the under-side of the faucet, but 
  Teresa eventually got her hands in there and got it tightened down. New 
  faucet, with a single handle, works fine, of course, the brand new, $108 
  faucet has an itty bitty drip.

  Back down to the basement to lead the attack on the toilet.

  Turns out that the water connection to the tank was pretty clugy. Check 
  this out, step by step:

  Long Copper pipe literally hangs down from the ceiling joists,
  threaded fitting sweated onto end of Copper pipe,
  shut-off screwed onto fitting,
  short, threaded, black iron pipe screwed into shut-off,
  elbow screwed into black iron,
  horizontal copper sweated into elbow,
  elbow sweated into other end of horizontal Copper,
  Some kind of fitting, possibly compression, bodged onto elbow,
  finally into tank.

  I managed to get the shut-off replaced with a ball valve without too much 
  trouble. I managed to get the guts of the tank changed with a lot of 
  work, having to cut and tare out some of the old parts. I could not get 
  the funky assembly described above to go back into the new tank connection 
  without leaking rather impressively. So, we are at a draw at the moment, 
  but I intend on replacing most of that assembly with a flexible hose.

  Nearly panicked when in an attempt to identify what branch of my house 
  plumbing has a slow leak, I turned off a shut-off and it proceeded to gush 
  water like a hose. I got the main valve for the house shut and messed 
  around with the shut-off for a while and cranked it open again and it 
  seems to be happy for the time being. I'm starting to contemplate 
  replacing all my shut-offs with ball valves. Replacing everything with 
  PEX actually sounds very good at the moment, although I think Teresa might 
  hang me with the PEX if I attempt a job like that. Certainly not before 
  the deck railings are done.

  I hate plumbing!

  -- 
  Blue skies.
  Dan Rossi
  Carnegie Mellon University.
  E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Tel: (412) 268-9081

  [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



   


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