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by ptmcc
1079 days ago
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I just redid my 15 year old original builder-grade kitchen sink and cursed the quick-construction plumbing the whole way. It was all glued together ABS plastic pipes instead of threaded pieces and single-use plastic shutoff valves with non-threaded supply hoses. I had to saw off all of it down to the wall and replace it all, this time with quality components. So yeah, you're right, the new methods and parts make for very fast construction but the maintenance and repairability/reusability is trending toward zero. Just like everything else these days, I guess. |
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Yes, this is the standard now for an number of reasons:
* because it is far easier to cut damaged sections of PVC on site and assemble replacements than it is to cut metal piping
* PVC is wildly less expensive than the equivalent length of metal piping, because it is used in a huge number of applications
* PVC is non-reactive and does not corrode like metal
and lastly, threaded pipe connections significantly decrease the throughput of a pipeline, reducing available water pressure at the endpoint. It is basic best practice to limit where threaded connections are used so that you can maintain uniform pressure across the whole unit.