Dan:

 

I guess whether you do the drain or not would depend on how hard or soft
your water is.  Alternatively, you could do as a friend of mine just did,
and put a household-wide water softener on your main intake line.

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Dan Rossi
Sent: Thursday, January 15, 2009 08:35
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] perforating an I beam.

 

Well, the whole idea of perforating the i beam is now moot. I did some 
more detailed groping of the i beam. Remember, I often go off on mental 
paths without fully investigating reality first.

I know some of you won't understand, or possibly believe my explanation 
here. Well, it turns out that the front side of the i beam is essentially 
inaccessible. The cement slab of my porch floor, sits on the front side 
flange of the i beam. Actually, imagine the slab of the porch floor to 
look something like a box lid. It is a few inches thick although around 
the edges it is a couple of inches thicker than that. The edge of this 
box lid affair sits in the gap between the flanges of the i beam. In order 
to perforate the web of the i beam, I would have to go through several 
inches of concrete first, then the steel of the i beam.

Screw that!

I guess I will go under and around. Not sure if I will use pex or reuse 
the Copper that is there, but try out Shark Bight or ProPress fittings. I 
am not sure I want to try sweating pipes yet.

I may put a dirt leg in at the bottom of the U that goes under the i beam, 
with a drain in it so I can bleed water out if I believe the U is getting 
clogged with debris.

Again, my fantasy world may differ vastly from reality, so this project 
may never happen. Although, I am putting in some real hard hours in my 
head. *GRIN*

-- 
Blue skies.
Dan Rossi
Carnegie Mellon University.
E-Mail: d...@andrew. <mailto:dr25%40andrew.cmu.edu> cmu.edu
Tel: (412) 268-9081

 



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