I need to remove a pipe that ran to an american fridge as the previous owner decided cut and clamp it as opposed to cap the pipe under sink, do i use an end cap or compression stop end?
I need to remove a pipe that ran to an american fridge as the previous owner decided cut and clamp it as opposed to cap the pipe under sink, do i use an end cap or compression stop end?
I would be intrested in the what the pipe carried...most likely a water supply for cool water and ice however there were gas powered fridges so beware. I would use a solder cap not a compression as they can creep over time. Centralheatking
Strictly speaking, neither. If I've understood what you intend correctly, you will be creating a 'blind end' or 'dead leg' in your drinking water supply. You should remove the T-piece that provided the feed to the fridge and replace it with a continuous piece of pipe.
Just posting again with a picture as i cant seem to edit my post, looking to remove a pipe that went to american style fridge. The pipe too right went to fridge which what I want to remove.
Replace the compression tee piece with a compression elbow. You could also get away with using a blanking disk in the redundant branch of the tee. You use the original nut to hold the blanking disk in place.