We Fluxed Up.. and Made a HUGE Plumbing Mistake! - THE SHOP Part 3

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Stud Pack

Stud Pack

Күн бұрын

Hey Gang, we're moving fast on this Shop Bathroom project. Before we start framing we need to take care of the plumbing, electric and water supply. We're always willing to learn and we appreciate all of the feedback we received (the constructive feedback at least). This is pretty much the last demo/prep video before we start framing this bathroom and at that point we can fly! We're stoked to keep moving forward and take you along with us. Thanks for watching and we'll see ya in the next one!
Contact: Studpack225@gmail.com
Blue Monster copper tubing cleaner kit (couldn't find the individual sizes)
amzn.to/3ojOlxC
1/2" copper tubing cleaner for a drill (other sizes at link)
amzn.to/3BaN1F6
Flux for copper tubing
amzn.to/3Pyb1WU
Greenlee #508 hickey
amzn.to/3vxr4MT
Fluke T5-600 multi-tester
amzn.to/3z26gOf
GFCI tester
amzn.to/3yUtTbm

Пікірлер: 334
@markpeterson9808
@markpeterson9808 2 жыл бұрын
cant wait to see you guys start on Jordan's house
@clintprice2123
@clintprice2123 2 жыл бұрын
It’s great to know that your viewers are helpful in showing you something they deem needs a tweaking and the best part is you’re willing to listen and share that something had to be changed. It takes special people to admit things and it gets you even more respect for doing that. You two are as real as it gets. We all continue to learn no matter how old or how long we’ve been doing it. Your positive attitude is a motivating factor for those watching to learn how to do certain things. Nice job as always!
@wjm1050
@wjm1050 2 жыл бұрын
That's how it should of been in the first place it's obviously you don't need a plumbing license in that State🤣😂
@dollyhadbraces9361
@dollyhadbraces9361 2 жыл бұрын
its hard to tell how far the toilet is from the double 90 that drops down. this distance is regulated by code im pretty sure ... the 3" double 90 has no baffle like an old school Durham so the toilet has the ability through velocity to push waste through the fitting towards the shower . ( separate exammple ) its not up to code to use a side inlet 3 x 2 x 3 x 2 side inlet "low heel outlet" within "x" amount of feet of a water closet FOR SURE ! . i forget what "x" is and that has the waste from the toilet hit the back of the fitting , this configuration goes directl straight through BAD. if i was doing this , regardless of code ( and regardless of distance as if the 3" toilet stops up or the whole sytem locally for that matter cannot be attacked from the toilet [or the shower lol] as the snake has a good chance of going straight through fitting and not down to clear the stoppage ] [ drain cleaners are shooting in the dark a bit and this fitting could be a night mare ] i would use a double combi and cap the top ( as a combie has baffle ) ... as im certain a lot of other plumbers would too. i think the code should require a distance like 6" feet . for folks that arnt plumbers , imagine if the toilet was 2' from the elbow that drops into the ground. when one flushes the toilet is designed to scour the fixture and the pipe with velocity and volume ... this sudden flow and volume will overwhelm the double elbow and go up stream . yes it will drain down , yes may never notice . but its not AAA plumbing. so the code probably will have a distance that the toilet has to be from this fitting so velocity is manageable. NOTE , ive learned a lot from this channel and thank the creators and commenters ... a 2'' line cannot serve as CO for 3" a 3" line must have a CO at the end of the line on the first floor , unless the entirity of it is less than 6' from where it ties into a main line [upc] and i think international does not even allow this , so instead of a cap on the double combie there should be a CO tee on top of the double combi.
@ismaellugo4406
@ismaellugo4406 2 жыл бұрын
Little tip I learned that made my soldier joints better... After fluxing and assembling the copper, any Flux left on the outside of the pipe should be wiped away so the soldier flows into the fitting better, rather than flowing over the outside of the pipe. Keep up the great work!
@MrRossKendall
@MrRossKendall 2 жыл бұрын
For removing water out of water pipes i use the straw and nozzle off a cheap £1 liquid soap bottle, to pump that water out
@Itsthatoneguy371
@Itsthatoneguy371 2 жыл бұрын
I have been binge watching your videos and they are great. I am learning so much about remodeling and it’s a joy to see the both of you interact the way you do. I’m 48 and dad is going to be 75 in November and do to his health, we have passed the point of this kind of father and son time but I still love to watch your videos. Which bring me to this comment…The video you did on that rotted floor a few months ago brought back memories of my dad, uncle and I (I was 11… so I didn’t do much) building a deck on my grandma’s house. It was crazy. My great uncle and great grandfather built the house sometime in the 30’s right after they moved from England, via Texas and Kentucky…and it was in my dads family until the early 2000’s when they sold it to my cousin on my moms side. {They had it for about 15 years then sold it to someone who completely trashed it}. Anyway, we had set the deck posts at random off set as the house was on a hillside in SE Ohio. We just finished the decking joists and we’re ready to do the deck skirt when the neighbor, who was … interesting to say the least, hollered at us “how many twelve packs did you ‘sumbitchs’ drink”. Of course we all looked at each other like wtf? (My uncle is a teatotaler and my dad doesn’t dink hardly at all. In fact, he bought a 12 pack of Stroh’s in 1982 and still had 6 cans left from it in 2002) he said you need to come here and look at your deck from my side of the fence. So we did, there was no fence but anyway, we walked over. We turned around and I remember uttering my first cuss word in front of dad when I said “holy shit!” at about the same time my dad and uncle did. They had just tied the deck joist into the house joist. 1 1/2’ over lap with lag bolts and nails… what we saw was 2”x12”x16’ foot joists sticking out of the front of the house that looked like a wave. It was Baffling to say the least. Not only were the house joist completely out of wack, but the whole house was 2 1/2’, yes two and a half feet or 30 inches out of square. We guessed that when they build the house on the side of this hill, that they just measured from the back side to the hill because those measurements were inline with the front of the house. My uncle joked that “maybe they forgot to pack their tape measures when they left England?” We ended up squaring up the deck and it was finished in a couple of days. But damn… I had forgotten about this until my wife and I moved into her grandmothers house about 8years ago that was build in 1941 and we decided to do a complete kitchen remodel and I was complaining that the walls were 3/4” to 1 1/4” out of square. Dad said , hey do you remember grandma’s house when we did the deck?… I think this has turned into a family tradition.
@catsmeow5566
@catsmeow5566 2 жыл бұрын
I love the fist-bump with the employee who handed the double wyes instead of the tees over the counter.
@davebanner8666
@davebanner8666 Жыл бұрын
Paul is the man. He is a great craftsman
@ChaiLatte13
@ChaiLatte13 2 жыл бұрын
I've seen other KZbinrs make mistakes and they will actually get annoyed by those commenting. Here you guys were like. "yeah you were right. We messed up!". Wow huge respect for you two. 👍
@worldadventureman
@worldadventureman 2 жыл бұрын
So many times when working by myself I've wished I could brainstorm an issue like your plumbing pipe runs for the hose bib. You come up with one way to do something and then can't see any other way. You realised a simpler cleaner way after you'd finished messing around trying to bend pipes etc, but I bet a load of us were screaming at the screen, "why are you doing it like that!" I think that is what is good about your show though, you don't hide that stuff.
@flowerstone
@flowerstone 2 жыл бұрын
Even using the conduit as a ground path I still pull in a ground and conductor using one of the old wires as a pull “string”. 🙂 As long as your in there.
@StudPack
@StudPack 2 жыл бұрын
We'll check it out Russ thx 👍
@EMTevjorgensen
@EMTevjorgensen 2 жыл бұрын
My wife loves my Stud Pack sweatshirts! 👍🏻😉
@stevenfoust3782
@stevenfoust3782 2 жыл бұрын
I personally would have abandoned as much if not all of the copper in the slab and run pex or something similar in the framing. The hose bib could have been run up and over in some way. I gathered that the supply was the 3/4” stubbed out of the wall.
@SuperJWATT
@SuperJWATT 2 жыл бұрын
the felt pad is to prevent adhesion to the metal box from corrosion. the screw is the ground as it threads into the box. it does not care about the felt pad. so the felt pad would be a good idea so corrosion does not defeat your ground to the box from the receptacle bracket. I love the father, son business run in the USA, I am in a similar situation! also that you are capable of admitting you can make mistakes because we all do! best practice is honesty trying your best, sometimes that means going back and fixing stuff which should never be thought of as a bad thing but more of a correction to previously faulted logic.
@joshcowart2446
@joshcowart2446 2 жыл бұрын
I started plumbing in 99 and did it until 2005. It was mostly service so even then I wasn’t as practiced in regards to code regarding how fittings were used. I did one job in between my hiatus and my return to full time plumbing. It was a remodel of my parents bathroom. My old boss came by to inspect my work. The only red flag I got from him was a San tee laying down. Considering it was a 2” tee for a lavatory, he thought it would probably work okay so I didn’t go through all the trouble to cut it out and replace it. 10 years later it still works fine but it bugs me. The other error I made was reversing hot and cold on the shower. I moved along the wall. It went toilet, bidet, then shower. So I did hot left cold right along for everything. The problem came from the shower facing the opposite way. We all make mistakes. What I like about y’all is you’re humble enough to admit and then correct mistakes even if it’s a rare occurrence. Sadly, there’s lots of people who make videos and treat corrections in the comments like an attack in them. Kudos
@rickdawson4507
@rickdawson4507 2 жыл бұрын
I plumbed a cabin in Sugar Loaf CA and there was a TGIF beam right center under the tub and was structure. The home owner wanted me to Notch it with a Saw but I said NO WAY. I laid a 2" San tee on its back and took the top of the waste and overflow and plumbed it into the top of the San tee and the shoe of the waste and plumbed it in the inlet of the Tee and the waste out into a 2" line running behind the tub and down the wall since this was on the second floor. It passed Inspection with flying colors and my friend who was there with me on that job was a master plumber who has passed away last December and has forgotten more than most plumbers know. He has been a plumber for over 55 years and I have been one for 46 years.
@joshcowart2446
@joshcowart2446 2 жыл бұрын
@@rickdawson4507 that’s one thing that bothers me about code sometimes. I started in a small town without inspectors. The first 5 years of plumbing I had one inspection. A neighboring town had a new city manager and he decided to start doing inspections. We ran a new sewer line and then called it in and a city worker who we knew showed up, looked, and said “ y’all know more about it than I do”. What you’re describing might fail by the letter of the law but for all practical purposes it would work fine. In fact there’s no difference in functionality from how it’s normally done. It was good that the inspector understood enough to allow it. Working in a small town was good this way. We did everything to code as much as was possible but we had the freedom to adjust if we needed to. It can also save people money. One example is In Austin if we find orangeberg we’re required to dig it all up and replace it. There’s lots of people in older homes who can’t afford to replace a whole sewer line especially if it’s working fine. We could patch it if need be. It’s good to have options. The downside is the people who would just do a bunch of crap work that’s nowhere near code and get away with it.
@sarcigon
@sarcigon 2 жыл бұрын
The dynamic here between father and son is unparalleled, they get the job done and have a good time doing it, that's the American Way!
@waltkosch
@waltkosch 2 жыл бұрын
Went from Stud Pack to Stud Hack on the plumbing. But you owned up to it and learned and didn't hide the mistake. Mad respect.
@StudPack
@StudPack 2 жыл бұрын
Thx Walt 👊
@x.nwx.x1620
@x.nwx.x1620 2 жыл бұрын
Stay consistent with the videos, your channel is going to grow a lot!
@orcoastgreenman
@orcoastgreenman 2 жыл бұрын
I've found crumpled aluminum foil works great as a poor man's throwaway heat shield for torch soldering near things like plastic pipe, wiring and framing. Can be formed around wires or against things and taped in place out of the hot zone. Needs to be a number of layers crumpled to create space in between. I always remove it right after I am done, to make sure it kept everything from getting too hot and make sure nothing is smouldering. Has always kept things from even showing any signs of heating, as long as it was installed with multiple layers with air space created by the crumpling.
@russwollet8998
@russwollet8998 2 жыл бұрын
I'm a independent handyman and really enjoy your videos. Keep em up
@pitsnipe5559
@pitsnipe5559 2 жыл бұрын
Even after four years of trade school, I never dud get the complete hang of using a hickey, same fir an emt bender. Now, my brother made it look easy.
@davidwayneprins
@davidwayneprins 2 жыл бұрын
I've tried bending EMT conduit as well but can never get the bends to land how I want them. So glad they sell conduit offsets, couplers and elbows for bending boneheads like me.
@KyleP133
@KyleP133 2 жыл бұрын
I feel like Im hanging out with friends and learning cool stuff watching this with you guys. As usual, thanks for brightening up my day a little!
@Toto-is8ci
@Toto-is8ci 9 ай бұрын
Post analysis showing a better way to set up the hose bib was excellent. Thanks
@Richdee2323
@Richdee2323 2 жыл бұрын
Maybe add a ball valve coming up the wall before the cap and also maybe one to the hose bib connection. That way you can work without isolating the entire building every time. By the way, love the channel and look forward to every video. Keep them coming!
@Ariel1S
@Ariel1S 2 жыл бұрын
If you do that make sure to get a valve with a drain or you'll never be able to get the water out, and you'll never be able to unsweat the cap.
@tallbrian100
@tallbrian100 2 жыл бұрын
Any copper in the concrete you can abandon and route above the floor is a really good idea. Copper in concrete will fail. Also stub up the 3/4 to an accessible location for when the feed from the meter starts leaking under the slab.
@Chungustav
@Chungustav 2 жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same looking at the corrosion on that copper pipe. I was thinking that is going to fail soon and wouldn't cover that up since it makes it a nightmare to fix later
@gmanxxx7225
@gmanxxx7225 2 жыл бұрын
How I wish I lived near you guys to hire you for my entire home makeover! Alas, you have your own home to makeover. Keep the vids coming!
@T.E.P.
@T.E.P. 2 жыл бұрын
Hahaha! Awesome intro! You guys are having a blast with the channel …. A ton of info and great humor
@95thousandroses
@95thousandroses 2 жыл бұрын
Good to see yall fixed the plumbing hiccup. Being a perfect jack-of-all-trades is pretty much a unicorn.
@randyriggs5463
@randyriggs5463 2 жыл бұрын
The best way to fix your sanitary sewer is to cut open the concrete and tie in the new plumbing to the old plumbing. Also every fixture needs a vent or else you will have problems. Cleanouts are a must to incase a backup happens. Just trying to help out. You can use the 3" stack as your main vent and tie everything else into that Happy plumbing
@aaronhill1229
@aaronhill1229 2 жыл бұрын
Per code a vent per bathroom group is good. I agree to have an extra on never hurts
@garbo8962
@garbo8962 2 жыл бұрын
The center conduit you have a very high resistance ground only thru the conduit. Try lightning a 6 watt incandescent light bulb using this empty conduit to provide the what should be a neutral wire. Digital meters have a very high impedance while the old cheap analog meters might only have 5,000 ohms per volt load. I have already installed one test lead from a digital meter to one side of a 480 volt circuit and while having other test lead in the air already read from 20 to over a hundred volts. In my 50 years bent a lot of heavy wall ( rigid ) both steel & aluminum conduit and never used a hickey. Best practice is to always pull a copper ground wire and never depend on conduit especially EMT to provide a low resistant reliable ground. Have seen way too many conduits loose the ground from rusted thru conduit & couplings that had conduit pulled out.
@Jutilaje
@Jutilaje 2 жыл бұрын
On soldering copper, y'all probably know this already, but my goodness does MAPP gas make a HUGE difference. 1/2" copper might take all of 3-5 seconds to get the entire joint up to the correct temp, you're not spending as long heating it so the rest of the pipe doesn't warm up as much which prevents the solder/flux from wanting to flow elsewhere, and the pipe doesn't oxidize as much. The other key to perfect & gorgeous copper solder joints I've found is using the minimum amount of flux necessary, and then wiping off the excess before you start heating. That keeps the solder from sticking/flowing outside of the joint. And then finally once the joint has cooled a bit, wipe down with a towel to remove the excess flux to avoid staining the pipe and potentially causing leaks down the road (flux continues to eat away at the pipe forever).
@HOGSBREATH1978
@HOGSBREATH1978 2 жыл бұрын
I agree with the wiping. I learned that when I was young. A damp cloth and wipe makes it look clean.
@wjm1050
@wjm1050 2 жыл бұрын
Wiping off the pipes after soldering does more than keep it clean that flux is acidic and causes leaks eventually!
@narlycharley
@narlycharley 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing!
@whattheschmidt
@whattheschmidt 2 жыл бұрын
Great tips. I think another good one is make sure to heat up the part you want the solder flowing into more than the other side (for instance the brass valve body) and also finish the heat on the backside of where you are applying the solder - this way it goes in the most evenly, and flows all around the whole joint.
@wjm1050
@wjm1050 2 жыл бұрын
@@whattheschmidtHEAT THE FITTING NOT THE SOLDER that's not a tip that's basic soldering 101🤣 arm chair plumbers🤔😳🤣
@CheeksADC
@CheeksADC 2 жыл бұрын
between the videos and the comments you can learn alot in these videos. I'm convinced this is the best place to go for home improvement or handyman work. find a video from Stud Pack about what job you're about to do and read the comments. You'll be way better off with all this knowledge as a collective you guys and the comments section come up with, which is really insane because I've never seen a channel before that reading the comments was actually useful, but damn is this comment section useful too lol. keep it up everyone
@Sparkeycarp
@Sparkeycarp 2 жыл бұрын
When trying to bend right up next to concrete sometimes an oversized pipe nipple or coupling made of galv,. pipe can help stabilize for the rebend.
@seanwhylly7699
@seanwhylly7699 2 жыл бұрын
The fittings are still wrong. It would be hell to snake that drain system. I wonder if the pipes are sloped
@EMTevjorgensen
@EMTevjorgensen 2 жыл бұрын
Paul, get you and Jordan a couple of Jim Buoy throwable PFDs for knee pads. Your knees and back (use it for sink work) will thank you.
@toolwarrior1773
@toolwarrior1773 2 жыл бұрын
Just FYI on copper soldering. On vertical joints, always solder the lowest joint first and work your way up. Doing it the way you did is risky because soldering the lower joint last can cause you to "pull" the solder out of the joint above it. Otherwise, great job guys.
@pd9717
@pd9717 2 жыл бұрын
It's honourable to be humble to correct errors in the presence of others. Much respect sir.
@conradcoolerfiend
@conradcoolerfiend 2 жыл бұрын
woah that drill reamer attachment blew my mind
@fishhardcharters
@fishhardcharters 2 жыл бұрын
I grew up on Bob Villa and I love this guy. Great channel.
@sharondymond
@sharondymond 2 жыл бұрын
My first husband was Rembrandt with a hickey. It was a thing of beauty to watch him work.
@josephrottina1901
@josephrottina1901 2 жыл бұрын
Little trick next time you solder wipe off the excess flux .Then when you start heating up the pipe wipe off the rest of the flux and no boogers. Great video as always.👍🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
@kevinintheusa8984
@kevinintheusa8984 2 жыл бұрын
Your channel must really be popular, I had to endure 5 commercial breaks in a little under 20 minutes. I love your channel so I stuck around. On some other channels, I leave when the first one hits. Great video and I can't wait to see the framing.
@milesharlan1
@milesharlan1 2 жыл бұрын
Thursday evening fun with Studpack!! Thank You Guys!! Keep Up The Good Work!!
@robertallenmcdowell
@robertallenmcdowell 2 жыл бұрын
Great opening, Curtis magically had the part you needed behind the counter. Love it!
@johnroumeliotis5917
@johnroumeliotis5917 2 жыл бұрын
Hi Stud Pack , great video , quick tip , at anytime the bonding of the ridged pipe can rust out , so try passing a dedicated ground , sometimes you can use the existing wiring as a pull fish, also I would add a drain in the bathroom center. I am so happy for your success and the Stud Pack House , good luck!
@tonyturner487
@tonyturner487 2 жыл бұрын
Turn a 90° horizontal, swing on a 45° to get plenty of distance & to minimize your height. Then assemble…. OR- tie into the main incoming water supply and take it up inside all the exterior walls. Eliminate the copper under slab
@thomasglessner6067
@thomasglessner6067 2 жыл бұрын
Bravo Stud Pack. Love watching two guys who like to work. Great teachers.
@davidfontenelle80
@davidfontenelle80 2 жыл бұрын
Paul great video. You should just cut the conduit low and use a Screw In Flex Combination Coupling, the change over to flex and you'll have all the room in the world. Also you can't rely on that conduit to be your ground path anymore, a ground wire should be pulled back to the panel and grounded in the panel for a direct path to the panel casing as a ground reference. Love your videos !!
@JOATradesLLC
@JOATradesLLC 2 жыл бұрын
Could you provide a drawing or sketch of your projects more often. It would be nice to visualize where you're headed with the project.
@LegacyZero
@LegacyZero 2 жыл бұрын
I gotta say, I'm relatively new to this channel, and I really REALLY enjoy you guys
@kevinsands6769
@kevinsands6769 2 жыл бұрын
I'm really enjoying this series. I'm sure it's common, but I've never seen framing on top of a slab.
@StudPack
@StudPack 2 жыл бұрын
Appreciate you watching Kev 👊🏼
@EMTevjorgensen
@EMTevjorgensen 2 жыл бұрын
I like that “Blue Monster “, I’m gonna have to get me and my son one.
@Paul-hl5ls
@Paul-hl5ls 2 жыл бұрын
I'm watching y'all work and not doing my work. On the Sawzall and emt... I found a drill driver adapter for 3" cut off wheels... love it ❤️ Why not pex water lines?
@steveloux4709
@steveloux4709 2 жыл бұрын
Paul, I know you know this: there are at least 180 degrees of bend already in the slab, and possibly more. You are adding back-to-back 90s to the raceway, totaling 360 degrees. If there is any thought you need a second circuit for a hand dryer or anything else, I’d pull the circuit before adding the last 90 degrees. That stated, TW wire that’s been in GRC in-slab for 50 years is probably rusted in place.
@stephentucker5406
@stephentucker5406 2 жыл бұрын
Correct I was going to say just that
@normm.7265
@normm.7265 2 жыл бұрын
It’s not just the skill; it’s not just the info; it’s the exemplary relationship you two men share with the world simply by being yourselves. This is what I appreciate about STUD PACK the most.
@udalimb384
@udalimb384 2 жыл бұрын
You model essential skills to live a healthy life. Being teachable and taking responsibility for mistakes and rectifying them. Bravo.
@gast9374
@gast9374 2 жыл бұрын
11:29 Cheers! 😊 12:44 Bar is closed, now! 😯
@Casmige
@Casmige 2 жыл бұрын
When soldering, wait for the green flame to appear, pull back/away with it & apply the solder.
@Rawdawg321
@Rawdawg321 2 жыл бұрын
it's cool you get to spend all of this time with your dad creating memories to last a life time.
@narlycharley
@narlycharley 2 жыл бұрын
I have that blue monster tool and it’s amazingly handy.
@casualstylenetherlands2588
@casualstylenetherlands2588 2 жыл бұрын
Lol since 3 weeks I watch daily, just to relax on Paul's voice and teachings
@jivydremsa509
@jivydremsa509 2 жыл бұрын
This is my favorite KZbin channel at the moment 👏🏼👏🏼
@carolinaeric8500
@carolinaeric8500 2 жыл бұрын
Man I was sad to see this video end lol I was like…we’re going to see the framing for the floor happen and then…we’ll see you next time lol We’ll can’t wait to see what happens next!
@nephewsque6751
@nephewsque6751 2 жыл бұрын
Great job fellas... good shot out to Holmes building materials. I use them when I'm in Baton Rouge working on mu Moms house. 👍
@cherok5036
@cherok5036 2 жыл бұрын
I rarely comment but you are one of my favourite channel you two are so entertaining keep it up buds !
@imark7777777
@imark7777777 2 жыл бұрын
Yes easier is easier but you have a valid point of not having water at the job site. Plus you never know what else is being fed from some thing that's buried. I would've done one thing different I would've ran up to the new shut off, then into a T, then two more shut offs one going back down looping through and out to the hose spigot that way both sections could be isolated independent of each other for problems down the road while also maintaining water at the job site.
@narlycharley
@narlycharley 2 жыл бұрын
I find that tinning flux REALLY helps give nice joints.
@jmaxim80
@jmaxim80 2 жыл бұрын
great video love you guys, your old man keeps getting better and better at his outros.
@nickbailey202
@nickbailey202 2 жыл бұрын
I kinda wondered if you were going to fix that segment to a sweep. I don't know if I could read the comments if I had a KZbin channel. It's got to be tough to separate the critical from the objective comments. You guys are just the best.
@straight_to_finish
@straight_to_finish 2 жыл бұрын
One of the benefits of soldered connections vs. pro-press is you can get in pretty tight. Press fittings have a wider radius to accommodate for the press jaw. I’m happy to see you replaced the cross tee!
@onecoolstorybro
@onecoolstorybro 2 жыл бұрын
Am loving this series so much - greetings from canada 👋
@donb3369
@donb3369 2 жыл бұрын
Another great video by a wonderful father and son team. I lookalways forward to the next one
@tristanrempel9662
@tristanrempel9662 2 жыл бұрын
I'm really liking your videos! My dad and I do renos together up here in canada!
@jimeneazy5999
@jimeneazy5999 2 жыл бұрын
I love how the community keeps you on your toes! Keep up the good work.
@teaguechrustie6628
@teaguechrustie6628 2 жыл бұрын
Love your guys videos. It’s so nice that the two of you can work together as father and son and still have such a wonderful relationship together. You two remind me of my father and I. We work together in a different field than the two of you and we also have an amazing relationship. I know of so many people who are not fortunate enough to have the relationship you guys have. Cherish it and keep pumping out that amazing content that Studpack knows how to do! Cheers from Canada!
@chetleonard169
@chetleonard169 2 жыл бұрын
Good stuff fellas. Good clean fun , ain't it?!
@martinp1544
@martinp1544 2 жыл бұрын
BOOM! Stud Pack! Love It!
@wendydix5534
@wendydix5534 2 жыл бұрын
I nearly tuned out when you started playing with the electrical. Electricity scares me so much I can’t even watch! LOL
@JonathanSenecal
@JonathanSenecal 2 жыл бұрын
Hey guys, not sure if it has been mentioned by someone else yet, but its also important to deburr the inside of copper pipes before soldering. Not doing so may cause turbulence which impacts flow as well as inducing abrasion/corrosion.
@edisont.picard4112
@edisont.picard4112 2 жыл бұрын
It's actually in the video. There's a brief clip of him reaming some copper.
@JonathanSenecal
@JonathanSenecal 2 жыл бұрын
@@edisont.picard4112 Yeahhh when I wrote the comment I wasn't there yet in the video - In any case it wasn't explained. Thanks for your reply anyways!
@nathanscheidler6393
@nathanscheidler6393 2 жыл бұрын
Probably a little late now - but for any soldering jobs in the future. Deburr/ream the inside of the pipe too, especially when you cut with a sawzall. Water flowing over those burrs causes cavitation. Years down the road that will cause pinhole leaks in the copper around those joints
@StudPack
@StudPack 2 жыл бұрын
We showed reaming the inside👊👍
@erichoward8735
@erichoward8735 2 жыл бұрын
Intro was awesome! Thanks for the entertainment. I love the thoughtful consideration from Paul and the get it done enthusiasm from Jordan. Reminds me of my family dynamic.
@markbarber1920
@markbarber1920 2 жыл бұрын
Nice video, I would have made the plumbing and electrical runs closer to the slab instead of just below the floor.
@wotterthose4511
@wotterthose4511 2 жыл бұрын
I really appreciate when you put the name of the project you're working on in the title so it's easy to tell what series the video belongs to
@BWIL2515
@BWIL2515 2 жыл бұрын
I've got to get a stud pack hat another great video
@Jam3s27
@Jam3s27 2 жыл бұрын
I would put a ground tale from box to the outlet
@edisont.picard4112
@edisont.picard4112 2 жыл бұрын
You can, but it isn't required if you use a self-grounding receptacle or metal-to-metal contact between the box and device yoke.
@rtk1122
@rtk1122 2 жыл бұрын
As a life long DIYer I learn so much from you guys. Keep up the excellent work.
@jeffreyhalet9632
@jeffreyhalet9632 2 жыл бұрын
When you installed it yesterday something didn’t look right, of course now it all looks right. Sometimes you can’t see the forest because all the trees are in the way. We all learn every day. Keep up the good work.
@arthurlisogor1040
@arthurlisogor1040 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome video stud pack!
@kcl2862
@kcl2862 2 жыл бұрын
White wire is the ground. Neutral only exists in the panel. Bare is the grounding.
@mrcoop3955
@mrcoop3955 2 жыл бұрын
Comin along pretty good yall👍👍👍💯💯
@jackbbya123
@jackbbya123 2 жыл бұрын
I absolutely love you guys. Been binge watching almost all of your videos for the past month. You both put a smile on my face and most certainly to so many others. I appreciate what you guys do, the hard work you both put in, and I’m glad to see such a positive mentality on the platform for my favorite two members of the Stud Pack Gang. You truly are one of the best channels I’ve ever stumbled upon and continue to entertain me which each release. You guys are the best, ignore the haters, and grind away! Keep it real, keep it up, and I am so happy I found you guys. Cheers 🤍
@josephgraham1065
@josephgraham1065 2 жыл бұрын
Another great video. I was thinking the whole time why didnt he just cut off the 1/2 inch and do it the other way. Then in the end you said it. another great job.
@seannappi
@seannappi 2 жыл бұрын
Hey! Great video as always, fyi instead of sucking the water out with a straw… Use the straw and blow into the straw works very well!!
@micahhawcroft1994
@micahhawcroft1994 2 жыл бұрын
just hold your finger over straw and lift out safer that way. Don't want rogue shaving to cut you.
@plumbbuild6517
@plumbbuild6517 2 жыл бұрын
But close your eyes first Lol
@slypig24
@slypig24 2 жыл бұрын
Just goes to show you human, like the rest of us. Thanks for a great channel, and cheers from Australia
@JohnClay77
@JohnClay77 2 жыл бұрын
It’s ok Stud Pack, we still love you guys!
@bullieboi
@bullieboi 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks guys!!! Lots of good info at the right pace. Well done mates!!!
@Jack_of_1_Trade
@Jack_of_1_Trade 2 жыл бұрын
I’m in Electrician, and i use live extension cords to see where the other end of the wire is. It doesn’t surprise me how many junction boxes I find
@Matt-my7pz
@Matt-my7pz 2 жыл бұрын
I honestly was wondering about the cross. I don't know how or when I heard it, but it was a super vague feeling. I'm a sparky so i really didn't know. GJ fixing it
@margaretbear
@margaretbear 2 жыл бұрын
Lol, you've really gotten good at the drama bits 😁. Great intro 😊.
@artursmihelsons415
@artursmihelsons415 2 жыл бұрын
Great video, as always! 👍 Yeah, it sometimes happens - after job is done, better idea comes in mind how to accomplish goal better way.. 😂
@hughjhardon8080
@hughjhardon8080 2 жыл бұрын
Nice work!!
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