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Posted by George E. Cawthon on February 3, 2007, 3:28 pm
46erjoe wrote:
>
>>> In doing some recent plumbing work, I had to sweat a particularly
>>> difficult and oddly shaped joint in the bathroom wall. I was surprised
>>> when I turned on the water valve and it actually held! (I've never
>>> been good at soldering copper tubing,)
>>>
>>> Anyway, a week later, it developed a pinprick leak. In the past, I've
>>> tried to re-sweat joints to no avail. But maybe I'm overlooking a
>>> special technique or product.
>>>
>>> Any help would be appreciated. I used tin/antimony solder. For now it
>>> looks like I will have to disassemble the whole thing and that will be
>>> a real mess because I will have to tear part of the wall apart.
>>>
>>> Thanks.
>> Using new fittings is naturally best. But I have been lucky to have a
>> glass bead blaster to use for cleaning fittings. The routine that
>> works best is to heat the fitting, wipe out as much old solder as
>> possible with something (I used a paper towel, quickly) and while
>> still hot, brush it with flux, wipe again and cool, then clean it in
>> the blaster. Use the fitting before the copper oxidizes again and you
>> get perfect joints, even with the new lead free solder. I built my
>> glass beader for less than $100 and that doesn't qualify as an
>> expensive tool IMO.
>>
>> Joe
>>
>
>
> Well, I tried re-soldering. Leak returned. Took it all apart and
> created a new routing system. Did as many joints away from the site as
> possible then put it together, this time ending up with five sweats.
> So far it's holding.
>
> I think I need to find a website with helpful info on sweating copper.
> I learned by trial and error and I probably need to UNleard some
> things. I also learned that different fluxes go with different kinds
> of solder. I thought they were all the same! Hey lead is lead, right?
> Wrong.
>
> Thanks everybody. Keep your finders crossed.
>
Wrong. Lead is lead, but what you solder together
and it's purpose is different. Course you aren't
suppose to be using lead solder for water pipes
anyway.
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