Tried to do first fix plumbing for a new kitchen today, got all the pipes under floor ok and in position. I bought 15mm JG Speedfit PEX Barrier Pipe and used the standard white JG Speedfit fittings with Speedfit Superseal Pipe Inserts throughout. There was some old grey 15mm piping I was branching off in some of the joints.
Thought I'd got it all in ok but when I put the mains back on the two main equal Ts (one for the mains cold and one for the hot) were leaking, and leaking quite heavily. They seemed to be leaking out of the middle join that had new pipe on it. Bit disappointed obviously and wondering whether to try again or bin it and go for a different system. Which of these is right:
- JG Speedfit is a bad system and you can never rely on it. If so, which plastic system is better for 15mm mains hot and cold water?
- JG Speedfit is an ok system but you should only use it where the pipes are all sitting easily and you have good access. I was trying to fit the Ts in a fairly tight floor void, and two of the three pipes were being pulled away at an angle so did not go into the Ts readily.
- JG Speedfit is a quality system that should be able to cope with joins even in tight spots where the pipes are coming in at slightly odd angles. I'm just a bad workman trying to blame my materials.
Couple of other questions:
How standard is the 15mm pipe? Is it ok to use JG Speedfit fittings on the existing grey pipe? Getting the inserts into the old grey pipe was a lot harder than getting it into the new white JG pipe.
I could probably swap the Ts for a 'Y' shaped joint a bit further back and make all the curves shallower and further from the join. But I can't find any 'Y' shaped splitters. Is it ok to use an equal T then two stem elbows? Would that do the same job?
I've just capped it off for now and retreated but I need to get it sorted in the next few days so I'd be really grateful for any advice.
Thanks,
Chris
Thought I'd got it all in ok but when I put the mains back on the two main equal Ts (one for the mains cold and one for the hot) were leaking, and leaking quite heavily. They seemed to be leaking out of the middle join that had new pipe on it. Bit disappointed obviously and wondering whether to try again or bin it and go for a different system. Which of these is right:
- JG Speedfit is a bad system and you can never rely on it. If so, which plastic system is better for 15mm mains hot and cold water?
- JG Speedfit is an ok system but you should only use it where the pipes are all sitting easily and you have good access. I was trying to fit the Ts in a fairly tight floor void, and two of the three pipes were being pulled away at an angle so did not go into the Ts readily.
- JG Speedfit is a quality system that should be able to cope with joins even in tight spots where the pipes are coming in at slightly odd angles. I'm just a bad workman trying to blame my materials.
Couple of other questions:
How standard is the 15mm pipe? Is it ok to use JG Speedfit fittings on the existing grey pipe? Getting the inserts into the old grey pipe was a lot harder than getting it into the new white JG pipe.
I could probably swap the Ts for a 'Y' shaped joint a bit further back and make all the curves shallower and further from the join. But I can't find any 'Y' shaped splitters. Is it ok to use an equal T then two stem elbows? Would that do the same job?
I've just capped it off for now and retreated but I need to get it sorted in the next few days so I'd be really grateful for any advice.
Thanks,
Chris