Foxtrot1
Well-known member
This one is a little off topic, but I thought someone on here could help with an issue I'm having.
I'm running a new waterline for our house. It is 1800' from the meter to the house. Little to no elevation change. I had the county install a 1" meter at the road. They tapped an 8" line on the highway that has 90-100 psi of water pressure. I have a bridge crossing 800' from the meter. The line is intact from it to the house (1,000'), so I had planned to tie into it and leave it intact. That waterline is 1" PVC.
So, here's the tricky part. I was going to run PEX to minimize joints along the 800' section. I had the local plumbing shop quote 1 1/4" pex, but it is 3x the cost of 1" ($2,450 for 800" pipe and fittings). Also I have to pre-order all fittings. The plumbing supply shop will let me borrow their pex tool (mine will only crimp up to 1"). If I order the PEX online, I will have to buy my own larger crimping tool. (Not sure what kind of bear it will be to crimp, the plumbing supply shops tool had a nut that you use an impact wrench to crimp the bands. I would probably have to get a hand held unit. I have literally 4 crimps to make)
Sooo... is it worth the extra hassle and $$$ to run the bigger pipe 800'? Obviously the bigger supply line will carry more volume and higher pressure over the 800', but I am still limited on the farther 1000' to the house. The house was built in 1978 and had a 3/4" meter and 1" supply line that whole time. I have no idea what their water pressure was like. The engineers or plumbers at work can't say exactly what the PSI will be at the house with either set up.
Any of you guys installed long waterlines, or have one to your house? what size line did you run? pressure issues?
I'm running a new waterline for our house. It is 1800' from the meter to the house. Little to no elevation change. I had the county install a 1" meter at the road. They tapped an 8" line on the highway that has 90-100 psi of water pressure. I have a bridge crossing 800' from the meter. The line is intact from it to the house (1,000'), so I had planned to tie into it and leave it intact. That waterline is 1" PVC.
So, here's the tricky part. I was going to run PEX to minimize joints along the 800' section. I had the local plumbing shop quote 1 1/4" pex, but it is 3x the cost of 1" ($2,450 for 800" pipe and fittings). Also I have to pre-order all fittings. The plumbing supply shop will let me borrow their pex tool (mine will only crimp up to 1"). If I order the PEX online, I will have to buy my own larger crimping tool. (Not sure what kind of bear it will be to crimp, the plumbing supply shops tool had a nut that you use an impact wrench to crimp the bands. I would probably have to get a hand held unit. I have literally 4 crimps to make)
Sooo... is it worth the extra hassle and $$$ to run the bigger pipe 800'? Obviously the bigger supply line will carry more volume and higher pressure over the 800', but I am still limited on the farther 1000' to the house. The house was built in 1978 and had a 3/4" meter and 1" supply line that whole time. I have no idea what their water pressure was like. The engineers or plumbers at work can't say exactly what the PSI will be at the house with either set up.
Any of you guys installed long waterlines, or have one to your house? what size line did you run? pressure issues?