After wet testing using a rothenberger pump 5 large 3 story's house this week I think I need to find a better way or doing so than just manually pumping, anyone made up anything to make life easier? Thanks
Ive never tested anything in 20 years , touch wood ok thus far, when i fill system or switch on water thats my test, dont own a pressure tester,, I shouldnt have said this because this week il probably get a gusher,,
Dont get me wrong ive had plenty of leaks ( never from soldered joints )
How are you doing it? Filling buckets and carrying them to each house, then using your hand pump?
what about buying a couple of hoses and joining them, mind you a monkey in a digger will only drive over it!
Yes basically just that, filling buckets.. Every now & again I could hook up to a feed close but the majority of the time it's just to far away to think about linking hoses
Ive never tested anything in 20 years , touch wood ok thus far, when i fill system or switch on water thats my test, dont own a pressure tester,, I shouldnt have said this because this week il probably get a gusher,,
Dont get me wrong ive had plenty of leaks ( never from soldered joints )
Fair enough, working on new build with big developers at the moment so you have to have test witnessed. Plus the amount of Hep2o fittings without grippers in them lately has been a joke so glad I test everything
Can you not use air testers?
I only work domestic houses not on site,
I use a Rothenberg air tester never let me down,
useful for testing gas runs before there covered as well
Can you not use air testers?
I only work domestic houses not on site,
I use a Rothenberg air tester never let me down,
useful for testing gas runs before there covered as well
What about testing section by section or zone by zone?
I only started water testing after 5 yrs because some hep fittings weeped. Scored the outside of the pipe by feeding through brick walls without protecting the pipe with tape.
hep2o is 12bar
polyfit/polyplumb is 18bar
speedfit is 10bar
length of time depends on manufacturer also, some want lower pressure for a short period before pumping up.
as for water supply, its best to use potable water from a known source, avoid hose pipes, dirty buckets and bowsers. sterilize your tester if its been a while/ left in the van holding your x400. Be careful borrowing a tester as it could have been used for chemicals which is not great if testing hot and cold pipework.
what i have is a couple of them big water bottles from a water cooler.
in the case of first fix for a domestic house, you should only pump it up to worse case scenario ie 4 bar max for central heating because safety valve will lift at 3 bar, likewise for the plumbing. No need whatsoever to pump it up to the likes of 10 or 16 bar
Get a couple of 20 ltr buckets and get one of those pumps you can attach to a cordless drill.
When filled just connect the test bucket, and test to desired pressure.