Talk of The Villages Florida

Talk of The Villages Florida (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/)
-   The Villages, Florida, General Discussion (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/villages-florida-general-discussion-73/)
-   -   copper piping (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/villages-florida-general-discussion-73/copper-piping-321709/)

jcmty77 07-15-2021 02:49 PM

copper piping
 
I was told my 30 year old house will need its copper piping replaced soon due to florida's water...i havent had leaks yet, but he said to expect them. Is this true for the villages?

my house is in Del Mar, south of spanish springs. it is stick built. I cannot find the water shut off valve (in or near the house). The only one I have is at the curb near the meter. has anyone else had this problem?

PJOHNS2654 07-15-2021 02:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jcmty77 (Post 1973588)
I was told my 30 year old house will need its copper piping replaced soon due to florida's water...i havent had leaks yet, but he said to expect them. Is this true for the villages?

my house is in Del Mar, south of spanish springs. it is stick built. I cannot find the water shut off valve (in or near the house). The only one I have is at the curb near the meter. has anyone else had this problem?

I had same issue as far as shut off valve. I eventually found it buried under mulch and soil where the water line enters the garage.

EdFNJ 07-15-2021 04:39 PM

Don't know for 100% sure bit it's likely there isn't a house with copper anywhere in The Villages. There are (were?) some with the old gray plastic tubing (I think it was gray that was the bad one) that had to be replaced in the original areas but I highly doubt any copper exists here.

retiredguy123 07-15-2021 04:43 PM

As long as your pressure is good, I wouldn't do anything unless it leaks.

Have you examined the piping and valves at the water heater to see if there is a way to shut off the water at that location?

jcmty77 07-15-2021 08:15 PM

yes, i and the neighbor looked everywhere for the valve..maybe it is under the mulch, i will have to trace the line.

the lines seem to be copper in the house...how do i tell for sure? open up the drywall and see what is coming up through the foundation?

jcmty77 07-15-2021 08:17 PM

pipe
 
ditto

villagetinker 07-15-2021 08:27 PM

There are houses in the villages with copper pipes, I have personally seen the copper pipes, north of 466, I do not know when or where they changed to PVC. As for the original question, I am not sure why Florida water would be causing damage, but I would contact an outside expert or inspector to get an independent opinion.

mtgjudge 07-16-2021 05:33 AM

You should be able to tell by looking under the sinks where the lines come out of the wall at the shut-off valves.

fritzgb1 07-16-2021 05:47 AM

Copper piping
 
It’s not the water it’s a chemical reaction between copper in the concrete that causes the pipe to deteriorate but also they bury the copper pipe under the slab and overtime rocks can cause the copper to puncture or wear through thus creating a leak. As for the shut off I found mine in a wall in the garage but I believe that was added as a shut off is in PVC

Kingsport 07-16-2021 05:56 AM

Make sure it is not a scam
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by jcmty77 (Post 1973588)
I was told my 30 year old house will need its copper piping replaced soon due to florida's water...i havent had leaks yet, but he said to expect them. Is this true for the villages?

my house is in Del Mar, south of spanish springs. it is stick built. I cannot find the water shut off valve (in or near the house). The only one I have is at the curb near the meter. has anyone else had this problem?

I would make sure this is not some kind of scam. If you DM me, I can refer you to a building inspector who can come and check it out, though there may be a small fee. Do not pay anything until you have an objective second opinion.

jimbo2012 07-16-2021 06:00 AM

FYI, yes older homes have copper, if no shut off in garage there's one outside.

They use CPVC not PVC otherwise

5632@embarqmail.com 07-16-2021 06:14 AM

I have copper pipes and house was built in 1997, shutoff is in the wall of garage

Neils 07-16-2021 07:04 AM

Copper typically is good for 50 yrs

Villages Kahuna 07-16-2021 07:04 AM

Yes, up north, to a 4-year old house.

The problem is caused by tiny imperfections/inclusions in the copper. Over a long period of time the movement of water in the pipes causes the imperfections to “wear through” the pipes. Initially it’s pin holes leaks. But a pin hole in a water pipe with the water under 30 psi will create a humongous amount of water leakage. Start shopping for a plumber to replace the old copper pipes in your house!

Petersweeney 07-16-2021 07:25 AM

Don’t do anything - copper can last for much more than 50 years- if you start touching it for what if reasons you going down a financial rabbit hole


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 03:41 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Search Engine Optimisation provided by DragonByte SEO v2.0.32 (Pro) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.