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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query groove panel bath. Sort by date Show all posts

Tuesday, June 6, 2017

Cliff Road, Falmouth TR11, 3 bedroom flat for sale - 44055647

Read article : Cliff Road, Falmouth TR11, 3 bedroom flat for sale - 44055647
The location Built in 2001, Seascapes occupies an enviable position along Falmouth's seafront with the most breath-taking, unobstructed south and east facing views to bay and coast. The bay boasts a number of beaches, from the more secluded 'Castle' beach, to 'Tunnel' and Gyllyngavse - Falmouth's most popular beach and home to the perennially popular Gylly Beach Café.
The seafront is part of the South West coastal path, accessing wonderful seaside walks to Swanpool and Maenporth beaches and the Helford River and beyond in one direction, and in the other, around Pendennis Headland, passing Henry viii's castle, built to protect us from the territorial aspirations of the French and Spanish.
Situated on Falmouth's southern side, Seascapes is half a mile from the town and harbour, where there is an excellent and diverse selection of restaurants and an eclectic mixture of individual shops as well as national chains, including Marks & Spencer and Sainsbury's, together with quality galleries showcasing local talent. Nearby train stations (Falmouth Town and Penmere Halt) provide a convenient link to the mainline at Truro for Exeter and London, Paddington.
Falmouth boasts the third largest natural harbour in the world and is renowned for its maritime facilities which offer some of the best boating and sailing opportunities in the country. Falmouth is consistently ranked as one of the top five places to live in the UK.The property Number 13 enjoys a prime spot on the second floor of this exclusive development, with phenomenal 180° views stretching from Pendennis Castle and Point, along Falmouth seafront and coast, around to the infamous Manacles reef.What is so exceptional about this apartment is the 24' (7.32m) long, sea facing balcony which spans and is accessed by both the master bedroom en suite and the lounge/dining room. The arrangement, together with its three bedrooms, is almost unheard of on Falmouth's seafront and presents an ability to flow in and outside from these two important rooms, whilst soaking up the heavenly outlook - brilliant!
Seascapes is set within gloriously landscapes gardens with direct access at the front to Falmouth seafront and beaches.To the rear is a gated entrance and pitch roofed garage with electronic door opening.This apartment is an absolute gem, of a type so rarely available. It presents an outstanding opportunity to own a 'slice' of Falmouth's beautiful seafront!Accommodation in detail (all measurements are approximate) Lift or staircase accessing the second floor.Entrance to number 13 Panel effect door with spyhole into...Entrance hall Video entry phone and door release. Radiator. UPVC double glazed window to rear overlooking the garages and main vehicular entrance. Meter cupboard with tripping switches. Coat/utility cupboard with shelf and hanging rail. Power points. Doorway through to...Hallway Corniced spotlit ceiling. Central heating thermostatic control. White panelled doors to three bedrooms, shower room/WC, lounge/dining room, kitchen and...Deep storage/airing cupboard Radiator, shelves and hooks.Lounge/dining room 19' 3" x 14' 9" (5.87m x 4.5m) A superb room with sliding patio doors to the balcony and beyond, overlooking gardens and seafront to spectacular, direct and unobstructed Falmouth Bay and coastal views. Fitted cupboards. Spotlit ceiling. Radiator.Kitchen 8' x 6' 10" (2.44m x 2.08m) With port hole double glazed window to the rear. Fitted kitchen in grey with tile floor and ceramic wall tiling. Units at base and eye level with roll top work surface and inset stainless steel sink and drainer. Integrated fridge freezer, neff dishwasher and washing machine. Neff stainless steel oven, grill, microwave, induction hob and extraction hood.Bedroom one 16' 7" (5.05m) plus entrance, reducing to 9' 3" (2.82m) x 12' 3" (3.73m) to face of sliding mirror front wardrobes.
Sliding patio doors onto the balcony and with glorious direct outlook over Seascapes' garden to the seafront, Falmouth Bay and coast. Radiator, recess. Telephone, TV and power points. Spotlit ceiling.En suite bathroom With full ceramic wall tiling and white suite comprising WC, wash hand basin, tongue and groove panel bath, mixer shower and folding screen. Fitted cabinet and overlit mirror. Extractor fan. Chrome heated towel radiator.Bedroom two 9' 9" x 9' 2" (2.97m x 2.79m) plus doorway recess, second measurement to front of sliding mirror fronted wardrobes.
Two double glazed windows to rear. Radiator, TV and power points.Bedroom three 9' 6" (2.9m) plus doorway recess x 9' (2.74m) to front of mirrored sliding door wardrobe.
Two UPVC double glazed windows to rear. Radiator. TV, telephone and power points.Shower room/WC In white with fully tiled white walls, WC, wash hand basin and walk-in oversized, boiler fed, shower cubicle. Fitted cupboards and overlit mirror. Chrome heated towel radiator. Extractor fan.Balcony A superb 24' x 5' (7.32m x 1.52m) covered area with spectacularly good, uninterrupted views overlooking the development garden and seafront to sea and coast, encompassing the whole of Falmouth Bay from Pendennis Castle and Point, right around to the Manacles.Garage A healthy 18' 8" x 9' (5.69m x 2.74m), part boarded pitch roof space for storage. Electronic remotely controlled up and over door. Power and light.Outside In addition to No.13's private balcony, Seascapes lies within a gloriously landscaped garden which is for the enjoyment and use of all owners within the development.
Electronic remotely controlled gates to the rear allow vehicular access. To the front are several visitor parking spaces and pedestrian access to Cliff Road, the seafront and sea.Tenure Leasehold – A 999 year lease from March 2001. The managing agent is Belmont Property Management Telephone: The freehold is shared amongst all Seascape owners. The service and maintenance charge is paid quarterly and is currently £573.28 per quarter plus an annual charge of £271.08 for insurance.

Monday, November 6, 2017

Transforming one's bathroom is easier than it seems, confirms JT Spas

Read article : Transforming one's bathroom is easier than it seems, confirms JT Spas

July 24 23:06 2017

There are undoubtedly many more beautiful bathrooms today. These bathrooms are often airier, brighter, and more elegant than just mere functional spaces where one takes a shower or bath. And at JT Spas, customers easily transform their bathrooms into cosier, more attractive, and more welcoming rooms with the right shower wall panels.

JT Spas knows and understands how important it is for homeowners to have the bathroom of their dreams. And having the bathroom of one’s dreams need not cost an arm and a leg, either, if one knows where to look for the best bathroom products they need.  Even just a simple replacement of taps or basins can already do wonders for the simplest and dullest of bathrooms.

One way through which homeowners can transform the look and feel of their bathroom is by installing new shower wall panels. Shower wall panels are not expensive, and JT Spas makes them even more budget-friendly by partnering with some popular brands to give customers extra savings.

With new shower wall panels, even the oldest and most boring shower enclosure can get a new lease on life, and this automatically makes any bathroom look fresher, brighter, and more attractive. The array of shower wall panels at JT Spas comes in different styles, patterns, colours, and thicknesses, and this includes such choices as Black Sparkle, Beige Sparkle, Beige Marble, Gloss White Embedded Silver V Groove, Light Grey Marble, Pearlescent Black, Pergamon Marble, Carrara Marine, and more.

One particularly popular choice with many customers is the Plastivan Craquele Beige PVC Bathroom Cladding Shower Wall Panel (W250mm by H2700mm), which comes in a pack of 4 wet wall panels at 10mm thickness for only £65. The regular retail price for this product is £159, so customers who purchase it from JT Spas will be able to get additional savings of as much as £94. JT Spas further confirms, “Manufactured from PVC and with a range of stylish decors, the panels are non-porous, hygienic and easy to clean, ideal for both wet and dry areas. The perfect alternative to bathroom tiles, you’ll never have to clean tile grout again.”

JT Spas also explains, “Each of the shower wall panels measures W250mm x H2700mm and come supplied in a pack of 4, making the total coverage W1000 x H2700mm. Two packs would be enough for a standard 800mm or 900mm quadrant shower enclosure.” To learn more about the shower wall panel selection at JT Spas, visit http://www.jtspas.co.uk.

About JT Spas

JT Spas is an established bathroom product supplier offering affordable yet quality bathroom products, which include an extensive and affordable shower wall panel selection. To learn more about bathroom product offers, visit the JT Spas website

Media Contact
Company Name: JT SPAS
Contact Person: Jim McKnight
Email: Send Email
Phone: 0330 111 9745
Address:Ash Building, Willowbank Business Park, Willowbank Road
City: Larne
Country: United Kingdom
Website: http://www.jtspas.co.uk/

Saturday, May 6, 2017

Copper pipe electrolysis from touching galvanized steel?

Read article : Copper pipe electrolysis from touching galvanized steel?
topic 24664

An ongoing discussion from 2003 through 2016 . . .

(2003)electrolysis in copper pipe

Q.I recently had a 1/2" TYPE L HMP flexible copper pipe that sprung a leak, unfortunately it was inside the wall going up to the second floor. After splicing the pipe where it was leaking another spot started leaking. I noticed inside the pipe a bunch of green "blobs" & the outside of this (HOT) water pipe a lot cleaner than the other pipe (COLD) that would have been put in at the same time, 20-25 years ago I'm guessing. I did notice one spot where the copper pipe was touching an old galvanized pipe seemed to be wet and green. Could there have been some electrolysis going on that caused this pipe to start getting finer than pin hole leaks & how much damage might have been done to the rest of the plumbing if that is the case?

THANK YOU FOR YOUR HELP,

Alex H [last name deleted for privacy by Editor]
do-it-myself-er - Cedar Rapids , Iowa

(2003)

A.Copper pipes can corrode in at least three different ways, but the differences are quite technical. I would suggest that the corrosion could be induced by a galvanic couple caused by contact with the galvanised pipe and this results in an induced local anodic polarisation of the copper pipe. I would normally expect such a failure to occur where the two pipes come into contact, but if this point is dry, no corrosion will occur and the effects of the galvanised pipe will be transmitted onto the copper pipe where it will react in a more favourable wet environment. Your photograph clearly shows the green copper salts on the inside of the failed straight pipe, so it must have been in an area where the copper is oxidised and failed. The propensity for copper pipes to fail is related to how the pipe was made, the local water composition and the environment it is used in. I would suggest there may be other not be other problems with your copper pipes, as there has already been a failure of an induced polarity, but if there are other non-compatible pipes in contact with each other, there could be a repeat of this. It may be wise to ask a plumber to check your system out.

trevor crichton
Trevor Crichton
R&D practical scientist
Chesham, Bucks, UK

(2004)

Q.I was told by a local plumber that electrolysis can occur in copper pipes when the hot water heating system is part of a forced hot water boiler system. The solution is to put nylon fittings between the copper connections and the galvanized boiler system so as to prevent any electrolysis action from taking place in the copper pipes running throughout the building. I would like to get other opinions since this is an expensive fix and it takes a long time to determine whether the fix in fact works.

Dan W [last name deleted for privacy by Editor]
property management - Juneau, Alaska

(2004)

A.It is the right advise, Dan. For galvanic corrosion to occur you need a metallic circuit and an electrolyte circuit. If you break the conductive metal circuit between the copper and galvanized pipe, galvanic corrosion ("electrolysis")" does not occur. This is not to say that no form of corrosion will ever occur though.

Ted Mooney, finishing.com
Teds signature
Ted Mooney, P.E. RET
finishing.com
Pine Beach, New Jersey
(2004)

A.Copper pipe failure began to occur approximately eight years after completion of a new home in Brewster Co. Texas. The leaks were always in the cold line.

A split-core ammeter revealed a slight current flow between the steel gas pipe and the hot side of the copper system. No current could be detected between the cold copper pipe and the hot, or the steel gas line. This led me to conclude that the cold line was acting as a sacrificial anode between the other two while absorbing all voltage drop.

No electrical bonding could be found.

My solution was to isolate the steel line (which included some galvanized parts), from the copper system with a PVC adapter.

Current flow cannot now be detected unless a jumper is placed between the steel and copper.

Is the problem solved? I don't know! What can be said is that there is no further measurable evidence of electrolytic activity in this particular system.

Sam D [last name deleted for privacy by Editor]
- Alpine, Texas
(2004)

A.As others have mentioned, there are three different ways for holes to develop in a copper line, and I have seen all three.

A typical trade mark of electrolysis is pit on the inside of the pipe where the electrical current has actually eaten away at the piping, this doesn't sound like what is going on.

Another way is corrosion from the outside, normally when the piping in in a damp location with high acid soils, or even in an unsealed sleeve (copper run inside another pipe, usually PVC, and normally from the meter to the house). This is evidenced by pitting on the outside of the pipe.

The last one I have come across, and am still researching, is what it sounds like this gentleman has. It typically will have build-up on the inside of the piping and will often times leave large "blobs" of build up. I don't know what this is for sure, but I do know it isn't electrolysis, and it has nothing to do with water that is too clean (mentioned on another website as a possible answer). I think it has to do with the water quality to a certain degree, but I think it may be the molecular structure not the chemicals used. I think the buildup is a protectant for a "micro-atmosphere" high in maybe hydrogen. But I could be wrong, I am still researching this. I will post any further findings.

Jereme Grisenti
plumbing - Blountville, Tennessee

(2005)

Q.If we were to rivet or otherwise attach a copper sleeve to galvanized chimney pipe, would this cause the galvanized pipe to fail? We have fireplace chimneys on the beach. we have several copper clad chimneys that are doing well, but the maker went out of business. Now we have only galvanized pipe to work with and the outside of it corroding causes an eye sore.

Bryan Malt
- San Diego, California
(2006)

Q.This is a piggy back question.

Three 1/2 inch copper pipes running from my basement to the Laundry room one floor above show the same kind of erosion as the picture accompanying the original question. In each case the green copper salts and pin holes developed where the pipes pass through the floor. You can see the leaking water from below but not from the laundry room level.

After one of two plumbers to replace one of the leaky pipes stated that at one point he felt a very mild electrically shock, I had an electrician check the system. The electrician said he could not find a problem. The electrician checked the system before and after the plumber felt the shock. We could not duplicate the shock with the plumber or the electrician.

The plumber reinstalled the three pipes and wrapped the new pipes in electrical tape at the point where the pipes go through the floor.

Since we have not yet found a source of electrical charge would it be prudent to ground the copper line to an unused galvanized pipe so any current would flow to the unused galvanized pipe? Any help would be appreciated.

Greg Butts
- Stafford, Virginia
(2007)

Q.When copper pipes are plastered over into walls do they need to be protected from corrosion either by cement or plaster?

Mrs M Bridger
Homeowner - Steyning, West Sussex, England
(2007)

Q.I have a brick wall in my bathroom and want to cut a groove in the brick run the copper pipe inside and cement it back up. Will this have a long term effect on the pipe
thanks daz

Dario Ruberto
designer - Toronto, Canada
(2007)

Q.I have some questions regarding electrolysis, or galvanic corrosion between the copper and galvanized water pipes in my house. The house in on a municipal system and it is my understanding that acidic or soft water is not a problem in my area.

I have extremely low pressure in the upstairs bathrooms, and moderately low on the main floor kitchen. In my basement I have galvanized pipes coming in from the street, they supply the hot water heater, and they run the hot water for a few feet beyond the tank. At one point they are connected directly to copper pipes which take the hot and cold supply upstairs to the bathrooms.

I intend to replace the galvanized pipe, but I am trying to decide whether or not to replace the copper pipes going upstairs, and as well the hot water heater.

To make this decision I need to understand a little more about what is going on with the electrolysis. Before discussing the ramifications with the hot water heater, I have the following questions:

1. Where the galvanized and copper connect in the basement, does the electrolysis happen only locally? It seems that the electrons would travel only within the magnetic field created by the metals and therefore only affect the pipes within about a foot or so of the connection. Or, since the water exists through all the pipes, does the electrolysis affect the copper all the way to the upstairs bathrooms?
2. Once the galvanized pipe is removed, will the electrolysis cease? (I understand that new copper and old copper will also create electrolysis but I assume this condition is not as severe.)
3. I understand why galvanized pipe corrodes when coupled with copper but I don't understand why it is that the galvanized pipe becomes filled with gunk on the inside and restricts flow, I would think the corroding would make it get slightly wider on the inside, not more narrow.
4. If I remove the galvanized pipe, can I clean out the remaining copper pipe to make sure there is no corrosive material setting in them? How is this performed?

As far as the hot water heater is concerned, galvanized pipe feeds it and takes the water out of it, however, there is copper flexible tubing that actually connects directly to it. I assume this means the heater has corrosive material in it and will likely not last as long. If I leave the existing heater in place and wait for it to fail, will it contaminate any new piping that I put in?

Also, if I run the new copper water service through the front yard within a few feet of the gas line will this cause electrolysis? If yes, will it affect the pipes inside the house or just in the front yard? Which pipe will get holes and which will narrow? Can I insulate the copper to prevent this?

Justin Zavislak
buyer, hobbyist - Seattle, Washington
July 13, 2008

Q.I have type k copper coming from the main to the shutoff in the house. after reporting a leak it was dug up to be repaired and all was found was a pipe with walls that have thinned considerably and covered in grooves resembling termite damage on wood. it was also riddled with pinholes.

the ground for my electrical is connected to this pipe. could that be a possible cause. please help. there other houses in the area that have had there lines replaced twice in the last 20 years.

thanks, cy

cyrus lambert
hobbyist - conne river, Newfoundland, Canada
July 20, 2008

A.Where I work they were having problems with the copper pipes. The anode rods in the water storage tanks had been all wore down. Plumbers found the electrical system grounding rod had been disconnected & everything was grounding through the plumbing, causing the problems. You might want to check but I think it is a code violation now to ground through your plumbing only.

Alex Hatfield
- Cedar Rapids, Iowa

August 30, 2008

Q.I have a problem identical to to the lead in this thread. Green spots on rigid type L 1/2 in copper pipe with water seepage. This 14+ ft run of pipe is leading from my gas fired hot water heater (after a few short copper fittings) across the drywall finished basement ceiling to a T that feeds hot water to most of the house. I noticed a small spot of mold on the ceiling, cut it open and found this pipe with green spots like the picture above and two of the spots (at different ends of this one section of pipe) have water seepage. There are several other copper pipes , cold water and feeds for hot water heating that have no green spots,(only this one length of hot water has the spots) and also a flexible gas line in the same bay. My fix is to replace this entire length. A difficult job for me, tight spaces overhead, and hope there are no other bad pipe in the house. Please confirm the cause of this. Is it likely to be elsewhere or reoccur?

David Goldman
- W Milford, New Jersey
September 3, 2008

A.In response to the gentleman who experienced a leak on a 1/2 copper pipe and then he split it exposing this thick green blob running on the inside for some unknown length. well from dealing with similar repairs and from years of experience in the field this green corrosion that you are talking about stands far from electrolysis. this green gunk/blob is what we use to solder/sweat our copper pipes with better known as FLUX this product is applied to the outside of the copper pipe once it has been cleaned and reamed. putting too much flux on the pipe and fitting will cause the excess to flow into the pipe and will settle on the inside of the pipe until the system gets energized and water flows flushing out the excess flux. if it was not flushed out and was left as is; guess what? call your plumber.....thanks.

Armando Olvera
- Costa Mesa, California

September 14, 2008

Q.Within the last 9 weeks we have called the plumber 3 times regarding a 4 ft. section of hot water copper piping. Each time a pinhole sealing leak about 4-6 feet away from a recently replaced(5 months ago that our plumber installed) electric hot water heater. After replacing 2 inch copper pipe sections at a time we finely asked him to change a length of pipe but, only last night we developed another leak, a foot over from the new pipe, closer to the water heater. Our house is 15 years old and we use city water. The leaky pipe had green discoloration at the leak points. The plumber says this problem could be expected in this area in homes using well water after about 20 years due to the highly acidic soil but we use city water and our pipes are in the sealing. He's suggesting we may need to replace all of our pipes but it seems strange that the leaks are all near the water heater. Could the water heater be faulty or it's installation be the problem?

Chris McQuillen
homeowner - Crescent City, California
September 14, 2008

A.Hi, Chris. I'd be pretty confident that is has to do with something electrical rather than well water. I think I'd call an electrician rather than calling the plumber again.

Regards,

Ted Mooney, finishing.com
Teds signature
Ted Mooney, P.E. RET
finishing.com
Pine Beach, New Jersey

(2005)September 30, 2008

Q.can a copper water line be spliced to an existing galvanized water pipe line?

Keith Medved
- Dyer, Indiana

A.Hi, Keith. When you transition from one kind of metal pipe to another, the correct thing to do is to use dielectric unions =>

These are unions that include a plastic insulator so there is no metal-to-metal contact. I'm not saying that this is always done, but it is the right way to insure that there can be no galvanic corrosion.

Regards,

Ted Mooney, finishing.com
Teds signature
Ted Mooney, P.E. RET
finishing.com
Pine Beach, New Jersey

October 24, 2008

Q.How can one determine the cause of frequent deterioration of a 3/4" copper water supply line? The section going bad is located underground at the block wall of the foundation. The home owner had to replace this line two times within the past year. The deterioration seems to occur on the outside of the pipe. There were no problems prior to the first replacement of this pipe section 9 months ago. The home has city water and uses a sump pump due to a high level of ground water. I don't know the pH level of the water. The basement is dry, but uses on a "floating slab" to channel away the ground water. I conducted load tests of the electric panel to verify the electric wiring. All tests proved satisfactory with only about .2 amps or less flowing to the ground wire. This is when a 35 amp load is applied to each 120 volt leg. This proves that practically all current is flowing back through the neutral conductor. The electric service is lacking the required two, 8 foot ground rods. There is only one ground rod, and it appears to have been installed as a ground for the telephone system. At this point I'm thinking the corrosion and deterioration was not caused by excessive current flowing top ground via this water supply line.

Dave Baylor
- Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
May 22, 2009

Q.Hi, Our house is 6 years old and from the time we moved in we have had this "green" problem. It has ruined my hair and has left stains in the sinks and toilets. We have had 2 different water softeners and 2 water heaters. We discussed this with the last water softener person and I guess they didn't have a clue about this problem. No one has until I
talked to some nerd at the company that tests the water for the city. He said that it was probably because of the fittings that the water softener company put on the copper pipes and if we didn't rectify the problem, we would eventually have pin size holes in the pipes and leaks! What do we do, who do we call and how do we go about fixing this problem! I want long hair again! Thanks!

Kathy L. Maxwell
- Grover Beach, California
December 8, 2009

A.While replacing the copper piping in a 150 year old home, I was puzzled by the green buildup inside of the pipe. Tracing the pipe I discovered that a ground clamp and wire from the circuit breaker box was connected to the cold water line 15' from the water meter where a jumper wire was also connected to the pipe from the street. In the circuit breaker box the Neutral buss was bonded to the Ground buss. That was okay. I also checked the sub panel to make sure the Ground buss and Neutral buss were not connected.

The wire mains from the electrical meter are aluminum. Current will find the least path of resistance, therefore current leakage to the piping is occurring. The remedy for this is to drive a conductive rod into the ground as deep as local code requires and connect a ground wire. Additionally I moved the ground clamp to the incoming side of the water meter, and removed the grounding jumper. As the water meter has dielectric connections the leakage can not return into the water piping since it is no longer grounded.

Bert Cooper
Equipment Designer - Williamsport, Pennsylvania

June 11, 2010

Q.Type K soft copper pinholes. We are having numerous issues with 3/4" and 1" and even a couple 2" services running from the mainline in the street to the property. 10 years ago or so we started having pinhole leaks appear on the copper always next to a flaired fitting so naturally everyone blamed it on a bad flair, then the specs changed and we were allowed to use compression fittings. This is now happening with the compression fittings as well, now everyone is blaming it on not de-burring the copper properly.

We just had to dig up a leak and found the pinhole leak in the middle of the 1" copper run (no fittings even close) and the copper was in a 4" sleeve under a major street which would eliminate the corrosive soil theory which the supplier will want to use, also the leak was on the top of the copper so a rubbing situation is not the answer. I have a question, is it possible for the copper at the time of production to have impurities introduced causing an electrolysis situation? Do you know of any other town having this problem. The suppliers here have no idea and have never even heard of this problem before which I find hard to believe. Thank you for your time and opinion

Bill Williams
water company - Tucson, Arizona
September 9, 2010

Q.I have recently installed and new water softener with an aerater in my home. My home is 26 years old and several weeks after the installation I noticed a blueish/green tint. I have had the water tested and the copper level is high, can the new system cause this?

Rachele Cancia
home owner -Sunrise, Florida
November 26, 2010

Q.I had an odd situation and was wondering if there is a known reason.
Last evening we noticed water dripping from the ceiling. Upon cutting open the ceiling, I noticed that the 3/4 hot water heating pipe (not sure if supply or return) was pressing firmly against the 1/2 hot water supply pipe, and that a leak had developed in the (smaller) hot water pipe where they touched. Fortunately, the heating pipe was connected to flexible copper to go up through the floor, and I was able to push the pipes apart and repair the supply line easily, but I am concerned what might have caused this leak.

Mike Paulson
former kitchen contractor, retired -falls church, Virginia

December 17, 2010

Below is an excerpt from Wikipedia's "Tap Water" page at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tap_water

"Pin-hole leaks can occur anytime copper piping is improperly grounded and/or bonded; nonmetal piping, such as Pex or PVC, does not suffer from this problem. The phenomenon is known technically as stray current corrosion or electrolytic pitting. Pin-holing due to poor grounding or poor bonding occurs typically in homes where the original plumbing has been modified; homeowners may find a new plastic water filtration device or plastic repair union has interrupted the water pipe's electrical continuity to ground when they start seeing pinhole water leaks after a recent install. Damage occurs rapidly, usually being seen about six months after the ground interruption."

Q.So if I understand this correctly, adding a union may cause this problem? How does one connect copper pipe to galvanized steel then, or how to bond from copper pipe (cold water line, for example) to iron pipe (gas line, for example)? What materials is the bond conductor made of?

Andy Roberts
-Maynard, Massachusetts

May 13, 2011

A.I have seen electrolysis occur with galv. steel straps, hangers and supports, with copper. It usually occurs at the point.
Pin Hole leaks are mostly caused by incorrect installation of plumbing pipes.
For example, If a plumber uses a pipe cutter, to cut a pipe, it leaves a ridge on the inside of the pipe. This causes a ripple in the flow of water going through the pipe, and will eventually start eating away at the pipe, from the inside out. This was a common occurrence back when track homes were booming, and the track rats were doing high volume production, and not installing correctly.
You can verify this, by separating the pipes at the soldered joint, and stick you finger in the pipe and feel the edge. If you feel a sharp edge, then the fitter never filed the inside edge to remove this. Which this is why it will happen in multiple places in your home. Also the reason it happens more to cold water lines, is because you use your cold water more that your hot.

Keith Van Aalst

-Anaheim California


February 3, 2012 -- this entry appended to this thread by editor in lieu of spawning a duplicative thread

Q.I need to run natural gas to an outside heater. I have a 3/4" gal water line which is no longer used, am hoping to run type 'L' flex 1/2" copper line thru this line to supply gas to out side heater, is that possible or is there something I could wrap the copper with to make it work?

Bob Hendrickson
-Pontiac, Illinois, USA
February 25, 2012

Q.I have a bunch of copper fittings. 1/2", 3/4" & 1"; I had the fittings for a year or more. Some of the fittings are starting to get corrosion on them, a greenish thick coating. What is causing this and how do I control/stop it. All the fittings are new and never used.

Ken Kramlich
-Sacramento, California, USA
February 27, 2012

A.Hi, Ken.

Copper corrodes, but usually not that quickly. The simplest fix is probably to put them in a plastic bag with desiccant. Sodium benzotriazole is a copper preservative. You can use brass lacquer if you are trying to protect them for artistic rather than functional use. Good luck.

Regards,

Ted Mooney, finishing.com
Teds signature
Ted Mooney, P.E. RET
finishing.com
Pine Beach, New Jersey

December 18, 2012

A. After reading all of the postings about plumbing -
There are a lot of factors to touch on.

Any type of pipe can be connected to a different type of pipe with the right connectors that can be found at big box or good hardware store.

The green spots inside or outside of a copper pipe is cause by Flux.
Flux is an acid that is used by plumbers when the copper piped is fitted together and soldered.
When a plumber puts too much flux on the copper fittings or pipe - It stays inside the pipe and causes the pipe and or fittings to corrode because the water does not get hot enough to melt flux in order to get it flushed out of the pipe or fittings.
Even if you air pressure out the lines, all of the flux will not move out of the copper pipe because flux is a paste, and what little amount of flux that does move will stick to any joining type of Copper or Plastic or PVC or Galvanized pipe or fittings.
Green spots on the outside of a copper pipe or fittings usually means the plumber did not wipe off any left over flux on the out side of the copper pipe or fittings, or the copper pipe has started to corrode from the inside out from using too much flux inside the pipe and the flux has made its way to the outside of the copper pipe or fittings and needs to be replaced.

As far as electric or electric ground going through copper - Electricity will slowly soften up the excess flux that was used on the copper pipe or fittings.
As the flux softens, and because Flux is an acid, it will slowly break down the copper pipe or fittings and needs to be replaced.

NOTE:
Most electric or electric ground going through a copper pipe is not a high enough voltage to melt flux -- it will only soften the flux.

NOTE:
If your phone line is grounded to the copper line then this alone is enough to soften the flux.
If you put some flux on both the neg. and pos. post of a small charged 9 volt battery you will find that the flux will soften.
If you leave the flux on the battery the flux will corrode the battery because flux is an acid.

NOTE:
If your phone or cable is grounded to your copper pipe this is enough electric for a person to get a small shock when touching the copper pipe.
After a person touches the pipe and gets a small shock, it takes quite a while for the electric to build back up because the voltage is quite low.
It is because the voltage is so low that when a person touches a copper pipe and gets a small shock you have depleted the electric in the copper pipe and a shock will not happen again until the electric builds back up in the copper pipe.

NOTE:
Anytime you have to run a copper pipe behind a wall that will be closed in, only use HARD copper pipe (NOT ROLLED TUBING OR SOFT TUBING). Place the copper pipe inside of a piece of PVC pipe and do not have any fittings or couplings that have been soldered inside the PVC pipe.
If you need to soldier on fittings - Solder the fittings on after you have cleared the wall that will be closed in. It will also be helpful to use liquid foam between the copper pipe and the PVC pipe to stop any pipes from clanking when the water is turned on or off. You can pre make up the pipe with the foam in order to let the liquid foam set up.

I hope this information is helpful.

Jim Drake
- Fredericksburg, Virginia, USA

April 20, 2013

A.To those dismissing the "green blobs" as residual flux are not understanding what I think are the inquisitors' issues. We built our home in 2004 and within a couple of years we started experiencing problems in our master shower. Initially, I was able to disassemble the hot water supply in the manifolds and clear out the green "blobbish" crystals. Our master shower is large and has multiple shower heads and two shower manifolds. Since then the problem appear to only exist in the master bath "hot" water lines. I have never had any issue with the cold water lines.

To give a little more detail. The green blobs I am experiencing a hard crystals and not any type of pasty or flux consistency. I have found galvanized steel nipples between the copper supply lines and the brass shower fittings. Two years ago the galvanized nipple on the shower with the most serious blockage, had nearly corroded away completely. Fortunately I had decided inspect the inside of the shower wall after suspecting some sort of "electronic" cause. This morning I found the same union on the second shower head that is now almost completely blocked.

I should have recognized something was wrong in the construction of our plumbing lines during the build simply because of the sloppy solder joints. I have a rudimentary knowledge of plumbing as my father was a plumber. Unfortunately, I was traveling extensively and didn't have time to address the bootleg plumbers my builder contracted.
I guess I was depending on the inspectors to alert us of any issues, but I have learned that lesson.

In summary, I would conclude that the green crystals are formed from kind electric current activity in addition to the hardness of your water. Our municipal water is very hard and my water softener is worthless so we are going to rip out the bathroom walls to see what other surprises we have in store and get a new water softening system.

Vaughn Broadnax
- Carmel, Indiana, USA

copper pipe secured with metal straps
May 21, 2013

Q.During a bathroom remodel, the plumber used some metal strapping (likely galvanized steel)to further secure the copper piping from the shower valve to the shower outlet. (see photo) Days later, my contractor had secured a loose toilet supply valve with a plastic part and explained that a metal material could negatively interact with the copper and eventually cause a leak. (I think he himself had just come upon this info when he went to home depot to pick-up the part.)
I then remembered seeing how the plumber used the metal strapping to basically tie back the copper piping. The wall has since been scratch coated and is about to be floated. I've alerted my contractor about this and am awaiting a reply. I really do not want the float to happen until I know for sure that there is definitely no problem with the set-up, or, until it is corrected. Any input on this would greatly be appreciated.

Jack Goldstein
- Mission Viejo, California, USA

May 22, 2013

A.Hi Jack. You need 3 things for galvanic corrosion:
- dissimilar metals so there is an inherent voltage between them,
- metallic contact path between the two metals so that electrons can flow from one metal to the other,
- a moist and conductive ionic path so that positively charged ions can follow the electrons, transporting atoms of metal from one point to another.

You certainly have the first two, but whether the third condition is met well enough for serious concern is always the question, and sometimes hard to define. When such a condition is sealed behind a wall, it sounds to me like poor practice -- then again, I'm not a plumber. You might see if you can find anything in the plumbing code about it. The problem would have been easy to avoid with any kind of plastic between the pipe and strap; you can hopefully get a scrap of Visqueen in between them without much damage to the wall. Good luck.

Regards,

Ted Mooney, finishing.com
Teds signature
Ted Mooney, P.E. RET
finishing.com
Pine Beach, New Jersey

June 3, 2013

Q.Having pin hole issues on the cold water line repeatedly over approx. 8 years -- same area.
The house used to have copper pipe coming in from the street and we did not have a ground strap on it. I can see how the pin holes would happen then. Then the copper pipe was replaced with PVC out to the street so there seemed to be no need for the ground on the street side of the meter, but I left the ground connected on the house side (still copper here). Was this wrong? Still another pin hole problem this year.
Tired of water leaks, Tom

Tom Canarecci
- Mishawaka, Indiana, USA
July 11, 2013

Q.We have an apartment building that keeps getting leaks in the first apartment. I have read everything and understand the problem, but we don't have money to replace all the pipes, so every few months there is a leak. The last time we had to replace all the carpet because it was leaking over a full weekend.

I have been told by one plumber that he heard of a product that can be put in the pipes that would coat the insides and help prevent the pinholes from developing.
Is there any such product?

Also someone told me of a product that can be painted on the pipes like a silicone or latex component that might be able to help.

If you know of any products like this that I can try, please let me know.

Thank you.

Lisa Keylon
- Fountain Valley, California, USA
February 11, 2016

Q. I just noticed there is corrosion at the elbo 90 connector of hot water copper pipe going out of water heater. Both are copper pipes - so wondering what's causing the corrosion. Otherwise I'm planning to
Simply planning to use fix-it stick/Keeny pipe wrap tape as temporary fix until I get time to call plumber to cut the pipe and rejoin.
Please advise:
1) is it ok to fix temporarily
2) if I need to dig in further to find the cause before I fix it.
3) are there any other things I need to check / replace while I'm fixing it.
Btw- this is house is 10 yrs old.

Venu Reddy
- Waukee, Iowa

April 8, 2016

A. You can also use a brass nipple between copper and galvanize .

Rodolfo ruiz
- Pasadena California usa
April 2016

thumbs up signThanks, Rudolfo. Yes, you can use a brass nipple between them ... but I don't think it will do much towards stopping galvanic corrosion.

Regards,

pic of Ted Mooney
Ted Mooney, P.E. RET
finishing.com
Pine Beach, New Jersey
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Saturday, March 24, 2018

Panasonic SC-ALL05 Review | Trusted Reviews

Read article : Panasonic SC-ALL05 Review | Trusted Reviews

What is the Panasonic SC-ALL05?

Imagine lounging in a bubble bath surrounded by candles, glass of wine in hand, while Kenny G’s seductive smooth jazz drifts across the bathroom. Or standing in the shower, soaping yourself to the strains of Iron Maiden’s “Bring Your Daughter to the Slaughter”.

That’s the dream Panasonic is selling you (probably) with the SC-ALL05, a portable waterproof speaker that brings your favourite tunes to any room in the house – including those in which the combination of water and electricity would normally pose a threat to your own personal safety.

Equipped with Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and Qualcomm AllPlay multiroom functionality, the SC-ALL05 forms part of Panasonic’s ALL Connected Audio range, following in the footsteps of the SC-ALL6 and SC-ALL7CD.

Related: Best Bluetooth Speakers 2016
Panasonic SC-ALL05

Panasonic SC-ALL05 – Design and Connections

Eye-catching, elegant and compact, the SC-ALL05 is a design triumph. Its small footprint (170mm wide by 77mm deep) is perfect for perching on a bathroom or kitchen shelf, while the simple black and white styling looks great.

My eye is immediately drawn to the slanted top panel, with shiny chrome trim. It’s a real fingerprint magnet but looks nice. It contains a row of backlit touch-sensitive playback and volume controls, plus six numbered presets that provide quick access to AllPlay Radio stations. The Voice button gives speech frequencies a boost in noisy rooms.

The rest of the speaker is covered in a fine grille with two LEDs at the top that indicate operation and network status. On the back is a lockable cover that keeps the sockets dry when used in wet areas – open it up and you’ll find an Ethernet port, reset button and the DC power terminal.

Panasonic SC-ALL05

Panasonic SC-ALL05 – Features

The SC-ALL05’s headline feature is its waterproof design. It’s IPX5 and IPX7 certified, which means it will withstand jets of water or being accidentally knocked into the tub. It can be immersed in 1m of water for up to 30 minutes, but I wouldn’t recommend it. A couple of drain holes let you empty any water that accumulates.

As part of Panasonic’s ALL Connected Audio range, it can stream music from PCs and NAS drives via the Music Streaming smartphone app. You can also play music from Spotify and Napster, although neither is native – it diverts you to the respective apps, and you’ll need a premium account for Spotify.

Internet radio comes courtesy of Aupeo and AllPlay Radio. The latter also requires a separate app, which lets you assign stations to the preset buttons. Moving from app to app for different services is a chore – it would be nice if they were integrated into a single interface.

The SC-ALL05 uses Qualcomm’s AllPlay multiroom platform, which is remarkably flexible and easy to use. You can carry out all the usual multiroom tricks – grouping speakers together in different zones, or playing different sources on each speaker – but the pièce de résistance is the ability to “re-stream” Bluetooth from the SC-ALL05 to other ALL speakers.Panasonic SC-ALL05

In terms of spec, the stereo SC-ALL05 packs a pair of 6.5cm full-range cone drivers, backed by a pair of 6.5cm passive radiators to flesh out bass notes. Total power output is quoted at 20W on mains power, which drops to 8W when running off the battery. You can hear the drop in loudness when you pull out the AC adapter.

Battery life is given as 9 hours of Bluetooth playback, or 8.5 hours in network mode. When using the AllPlay system, you can play MP3, AAC, FLAC, ALAC and WAV, the latter three up to 192kHz/24-bit.
Panasonic SC-ALL05

Panasonic SC-ALL05 – Setup and Operation

Wi-Fi setup is quick and easy – just open the Music Streaming app and follow the onscreen instructions. After it finds the ALL05, just key in your Wi-Fi password and you’re good to go.

The lack of a dedicated remote means operation is restricted to your smartphone or tablet. That’s a little annoying if your phone dies – but thankfully, there’s a decent range of controls on the unit itself.

As established in our previous ALL speaker reviews, the Music Streaming app is one of the best around. The friendly colour scheme and clear layout make navigation intuitive, and it scrolls through large NAS drive libraries without buffering. A search tool is on hand to help find a particular track or album.

To start playing music, your first port of call is the Browse menu, which lists servers, streaming services and radio apps. During playback you can switch between the Browse and Queue menus, the latter allowing you to change the playback order by dragging and dropping tracks. Tap the album art at the top and it expands to a full-screen Now Playing menu, with playback controls, volume and track sliders.

Multiroom control is carried out in a sidebar menu, where each speaker is denoted by a differently coloured icon. You can rename and group them together by dragging and dropping the icons onto each other – the icons link up and the current playback source is displayed between them. Panasonic SC-ALL05

Panasonic SC-ALL05 – Performance

The SC-ALL05 musters a solid, cohesive sound with punchy bass and decent clarity. Despite its modest power rating and compact size, it goes nice and loud, which is a godsend when you’re clanking around in the kitchen.

It also produces a surprising amount of bass for such a small unit. It’s warm and full-bodied, lending depth to anything you play. The funky bass groove in “Just Say Nothing” by Incognito is handled with impressive agility; notes stop and start accurately. It can become a little boomy as you nudge the volume higher, but in general everything hangs together nicely.

Meanwhile, the track’s snare drums have a lively snap and the cymbals are suitably crisp. This terrific sense of clarity extends to instruments and vocals too, which stay clear and focused. Panasonic has clearly designed this speaker to make itself heard in lively environments with its forceful, biting tone.

Voice mode takes this idea even further, stripping away most of the bass and enhancing the mids in order to make speech more audible when you’re in the shower. Normally I’d run a mile from features such as this, but it works wonders, making the news headlines audible over the hiss.

Panasonic SC-ALL05

This is ideal when going about your day-to-day business, but cracks appear when you sit down and listen critically. The mids and high frequencies are rather thin and forced, lacking the refinement and smoothness you get from other wireless speakers at this price.

A touch of hardness also creeps in as you approach the top end of the volume range (although it keeps its composure for longer than I expected) and the soundstage is fairly narrow given the unit’s obvious physical restrictions.

So it’s no substitute for your living room hi-fi system then, but it isn’t designed to be. As a portable speaker that you can play anywhere in the house – including the bathroom or garden – it does a terrific job. And when you throw in flexible multiroom functionality, compact design and long battery life, the SC-ALL05 looks like it could really make a splash (sorry).

Panasonic SC-ALL05

Should I buy the Panasonic SC-ALL05?

If you’ve already bought into Panasonic’s ALL multiroom system, adding the SC-ALL05 is a no-brainer. Its IPX5/7 waterproofing lets you expand your ecosystem into the bathroom or garden, without the threat of water curtailing your musical enjoyment.

Its clear, punchy and vigorous sound is ideal for day-to-day listening, while the handy Voice mode makes speech audible over the hiss of the shower. Granted, its thin, hurried high frequencies and slightly boomy bass won’t make audiophiles go weak at the knees, but on the whole it does a fine job.

If you’re buying the SC-ALL05 as a standalone speaker, you won’t be disappointed either. Qualcomm’s slick, reliable AllPlay platform makes music streaming a cinch, while decent battery life, appealing features and a compact design further bolster the Panasonic’s buyability.

Verdict

The SC-ALL05’s sound quality won’t set the world alight, but with its long battery life, compact design, slick operation and nifty features, this portable waterproof speaker is sure to make a splash.