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Author Topic: Polybutylene Piping  (Read 7246 times)

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Offline regan41

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Polybutylene Piping
« on: August 01, 2013, 09:48:50 PM »
Hi there,

After a bit of advice on the following please.

So basically my parents home has Polybutylene pipe for Hot & Cold mains all through walls and roof of their home and over the twenty + years they have owned it they have been repairing join after join with our local plumbers and they always say "can't guarantee how long that will last". So over the last few days i've been having a look using my sparky wall camera and moisture meter etc where the pipes run down and they have had slow leaks in every single wall that the water pipes run down, some worse than others such as the wall I literally pushed my hand through and pulled the entire sheet of jib off its nails.

So I have gone research mad and am after the final key piece of advice so we can get this done quickly for them. Basically I have found that the newer Polybutylene pipe that conforms to the AS/NZS 2642.2:1994 standard should be fine? There is a section in their roof that was replaced by a piece that has this number printed on it and they haven't had any problems with that bit since they did it 10years ago or so.

Today I wen't looking at all the pipe in the roof to find labels/markings to see if it was Dux Quest as the local plumber asked and discovered only the piece that was replaced has any markings, all the rest original stuff is blank, no printing on it anywhere!

Googled around and found this part of info on masterplumbers.co.nz "Polypropylene pipe and fittings are increasingly used where rigid pipe is appropriate. You can check the markings on the pipe to see what the material is and to what standard it has been manufactured. If there’s no information, stay clear!"

Now my Dad and I have to complete this project, due to lack of funds and unable to pay other quotes we have been given plus Gib, insulation, paint etc. So we are asking for a super quick recommendation on this.

We have discovered the following company:

http://www.nzpipe.co.nz/ - They have a range of pipe and all the fittings we would ever need. Have you ever used any of these or seen them about? If so good bad or ugly?

I have the following extra info from the owner:
  • It has AS/NZS 2642.2 written on the pipe
  • No leaking at all since we have been selling them. We only use this push type fittings in my home country( South Korea). If you connect fittings on the pipe properly, then there is no leaking problems at all.
  • Pipe and Joiners guaranteed for 25 years

Please can we have your honest opinions about this situation and our current plan forward?

Linkback: https://www.plumbers.nz/ask-plumbers-public/2/polybutylene-piping/1519/

Offline Jaxcat

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Re: Polybutylene Piping
« Reply #1 on: August 01, 2013, 11:47:10 PM »
Buy from a reputable merchant - cheap is not cheap with it all goes to shit.  I would stick to the big boys who can back up what they sell, Mico, Plumbing World, Zip, but steer clear of cheap- has you Dad approached his insurance company about consequential damage i.e. gib, paint etc.  They will often pay for this, but not the actual replacement of the pipe.  If the joins are leaking it could well be Dux Quest. 

I am really suspicious of stuff that seems so cheap it is too good to be true.  Where will the owner of that place be in 10 years time when it may turn to custard, whereas if you stick to the new Dux or Buteline products you know their companies will definitely be there in 10 years time.
Have you learned lessons only of those who admired you, and were tender with you, and stood aside for you?  Have you not learned great lessons from those who braced themselves against you, and disputed the passage with you?  (Walt Whitman 1819-1891)  American Poet

Offline wombles

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Re: Polybutylene Piping
« Reply #2 on: August 02, 2013, 07:19:15 PM »
Mrs Womble here - My hubby had a customer who had purchased this product and wanted someone to install it. There are 6 local plumbers and none would install it as they all felt that there would be problems which could cost them financially and if there were complaints to the GDB then their license could be taken from them.   These people had to purchase regular productfrom a reputable dealer

Offline bowtieboy

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Re: Polybutylene Piping
« Reply #3 on: August 02, 2013, 07:34:46 PM »
hi regan41. I completely agree with jaxcat, you should only use known brands. so don't go past either dux secura gold or buteline. its a no brainer.do it once do it right.
regards
I believe in doing a job once and right. !

Offline Thomas Cleaver

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Re: Polybutylene Piping
« Reply #4 on: January 28, 2014, 11:37:29 AM »
Hi, have you had a look at www.pwsinterntional.com?
They have cheaper pipe and fittings than any other system in NZ and carry a 30 year guarantee on all their pipe and fittings.
Also, all their brassware is NZ made!

Offline Thomas Cleaver

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Re: Polybutylene Piping
« Reply #5 on: January 28, 2014, 11:39:20 AM »
Oops, sorry misspelled the address.
It's www.pwsinternational.com  8)

Offline wombles

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Re: Polybutylene Piping
« Reply #6 on: January 30, 2014, 07:21:41 AM »
I'd be very keen to hear from anyone who uses it. The company sells direct to plumbers, cutting out the merchant, and the product is HALF the price of bute. I received info about it on Monday and have been waiting with baited breath for the comments.  Someone must buy it. Just as they must buy the PVC that's about 1/3 of the price the merchants sell it for.

Offline integrated

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Re: Polybutylene Piping
« Reply #7 on: January 30, 2014, 07:10:53 PM »
I tried lodging request for info & pricing through the website but it kept giving error messages

Offline Shoreside

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Re: Polybutylene Piping
« Reply #8 on: April 14, 2014, 08:55:12 PM »
Get pipe that is "water marked" with the water mark logo. is a safe bet.

Offline Enn

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Re: Polybutylene Piping
« Reply #9 on: April 14, 2014, 10:26:10 PM »
Apparently water mark on the product is no guarantee that it the product is to water mark standard. anything can be printed on the pipe (product) that you require.
Not that have seen it myself tho.

Recently had to replace a water main for code compliance certificate to be issued as the council required a standard to be visible on the product ( been in service for a number of years)

As due to legislation we have to concern ourselves with the "fit for purpose" clause. This opens up a can of worms when the client wants to supply material  and labour only.

Welcome to the world of liability Y'all..... oh yeah that must be the plumber!

may be cheap in the short run but when it all turns to custard will the supplier stand up and be counted on?



''Never have so many been fooled by so few''
Plumbing is not a career it is a disease....

Offline Jaxcat

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Re: Polybutylene Piping
« Reply #10 on: April 15, 2014, 09:37:25 PM »
I agree with Enn 100% - why would you want to buy a product, no matter how cheap it is - unless you have 100% guarantee that it will be backed up by the supplier.  Cheap is cheap for a reason?  No merchant - then how big is the supplier - and if it all goes to shit, will he shoot the gap and leave you holding the liability.  And why do we want to do cheap, cheap, cheap?  Surely quality should be our benchmark?  What do you think about the plumber that advertises - only $XXXX per hour (way under your hourly rate) - I know I always think - how the hell can they do that?  But then I have seen how - they charge a cheap hourly rate, but have things like On site Charge for the first hour (say an additional $35), they charge for all sorts of tools instead of throwing them in as part of your kit that comes with your for $XXXX

Mate, I would be very careful not to be seduced by cheap unless you are satisfied that you have done due diligence.  I know that from time to time we bag merchants, but these guys will be there tomorrow, next week, next month and next year, and next decade.  That is called peace of mind.  For you AND for your customer.


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