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Discuss General advise on plumbing tools and materials in the UK Plumbing Forum | Plumbing Advice area at PlumbersForums.net

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I am renovating a house, which currently has no plumbing. Attached is the design for the house. I'm getting a plumber to fit the boiler and core central heating zones. I am fitting the bathroom, kitchen and radiators.

I was planning to use PEX, but I am struggling with availability of manufacturers in the UK. I looked at Uponor, but buying all the PEX-A tools seems a bit excessive for a single job. PEX-B seems more suitable. Does anyone have suggestions of suppliers, tools and manufacturers that I can use to start more research. I don't want to learn how to solder. Crimping seems like a better idea than push-fit too.
 

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The only problem you'll have is most plumbers won't have PEX crimp tools. We've been soldering forever and that is the gold standard; not necessarily the best, but copper is what we are used to. Pressfit copper may take over? Or we use pushfit because it's quick.

If you go for a crimp system, make sure it is compatible with something standard, else should that house ever need a plumber, any repair or modification will see the tradesmen or tradeswomen mostly walking off looking confused. Have you considered pert-al-pert (MLCP)? At least you can get it WRAS-approved easily and we all know what it is and someone like Uheat may have fittings or tools that won't break the bank.
 
The only problem you'll have...
I wonder how he's planning to handle insurance?

My understanding is that most home owner's policies exclude damage caused by faulty plumbing or previous work that hasnā€™t been done correctly. If the OP uses a professional, which is what I'd strongly advise, this is covered by their liability insurance, qualifications and track record, etc. OTOH, if a loss adjuster spots it's a DIY installation I imagine the burden of proof will, in practice, shift to the OP to prove the work has been done correctly. That's a tricky case to make if there's been water pouring down the walls and through the ceiling. :)
 
I wonder how he's planning to handle insurance?

My understanding is that most home owner's policies exclude damage caused by faulty plumbing or previous work that hasnā€™t been done correctly. If the OP uses a professional, which is what I'd strongly advise, this is covered by their liability insurance, qualifications and track record, etc. OTOH, if a loss adjuster spots it's a DIY installation I imagine the burden of proof will, in practice, shift to the OP to prove the work has been done correctly. That's a tricky case to make if there's been water pouring down the walls and through the ceiling. :)
I assumed he'd be happy to take responsibility if he wants to DIY it. You make a good point.
 
I assumed he'd be happy to take responsibility if he wants to DIY it. You make a good point.
Thanks for your replies.

I'm still in the early planning phase. My intention was to get a plumber to pressure test everything on first fix. I'm still in two minds, as the initial cost of buying all the tools required might negate the savings.
 
Well Iā€™m a DIYer, but have been doing stuff for donkeyā€™s years. Solder and end feed fittings are so cheap and a much better standard than push fit. Just buy a bag of fittings and a length of pipe and practice, practice, practice. Cleanliness is your friend - or it used to be but with modern fluxes you can almost get away with murder. Locktite thread for any screwed joints and a touch of quality paste on compression joints will go a long way to a decent install.
Decent tools help such as a Rothenburger torch. If you are good with your hands then crack onā€¦ if you are not then leave it to the professionals.
Plastic pipe has itā€™s place but not for me.
In the commercial world it is all crimped but the cost of decent kit and fittings puts it out of most domestic environments - but it is taking over slowly.
 
Hey there, beginner here, i've done something similar to this, kitchen and bathroom, and i did solder some tubes together and it came out better than expected. Also make sure you get the right fittings, not like me, to make the connections easy.
 

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