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This is a job I piped to show the boys how it is done. Now if we could only get the electricans to learn how to run conduit we would have a nice looking job.

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Nice job old dude. At least you can still get your pipe straight!
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You posted that in the wrong place.
It dose not belong in the "Wall of Shame"
Very nice job,
Yuma,
What is snow? Is it that white stuff in a freezer?
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I agree! Nice piping job. Too bad the electricians aren't up to snuff though. Shouldn't that be EMT(my bag, rigid, you're right piper) with weather-tight fittings instead of weather-tight flex, and with the same supports, (unistrut), like you have? Time to sub-out different electricians I'd say! With your quality, I bet you have sight-glasses right before the TEV's too.
[Edited by jdhall on 07-26-2003 at 01:56 AM]
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Looks good! The roof staying in the units in the back ground?
What was done to help from the crushing next winter!?
On the first units, where was the line set running before? Couldn't use the same set?
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Benn
Nice piping job of course. Try to teach the electricians to pick-up their trash too.
Be safe not fast. body parts don't grow back
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Originally posted by mayguy
Looks good! The roof staying in the units in the back ground?
What was done to help from the crushing next winter!?
On the first units, where was the line set running before? Couldn't use the same set?
Really. I just noticed that was the same job as the beer cans in the other thread. Or is that just job security
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Isn`t that the same place where the snow crushed the units last winter?
Nice work. I started putting the filters inside a few years back.
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don't you hate it when you make your piping look that good and the electrician does that!
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Electricians
Yea, there the ones that say, "Shorted to Ground"
Like saying, bring me a glass of wet water.
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Nice looking job BUT...it looks like you used soft solder? Say it isn't so
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If he used staybright soft, you can`t do any better.
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JW Harris he is the man. James is right it is Staybrite. There was a good reason for using this low temperature silver. Since this was a replacement system the existing lines had oil in them.
So even thought we tried to wipe out the oil the best we could I didn't want to take the chance of igniting the oil. This would have created more contaimination than it was worth.
I would always use Silfos for discharge lines. But Staybrite is perfectly acceptable for refrigeration lines. Read the specifications for it. It should not be confused with 50/50 or 95/5. When I was a kid we put in whole supermarkets using this stuff.
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