Plumbing Rough-In Ep.43

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Published 2019-10-03
This plumbing work was done by my good friend Phil Rokus. He is a fantastic plumber and great all-around mad scientist type. You'll be seeing more of Phil in later plumbing videos in this series.

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All Comments (21)
  • @at2wells
    I Love Phil. Gets his info from rumors. Lol. My kind of humor.
  • I'd hire Phil just to talk to me while I did all the work. šŸ˜œ
  • @DominicMuren
    Black is totally quieter! The B in ABS is Butadiene, a sub-molecule of the ABS polymer that is fairly elastic (Butadiene rubber is one of the common rubber replacements). This elasticity helps to damp vibrations like sound, making it quieter in general. Loved the video. What a mountain of information is crammed into that old salt's head :)
  • @kwagmire
    "That's when plumbers were men" Phil is awesome!
  • @aserta
    Once you're done with this project, it would be fantastic if you could catch everyone involved in the project in a circle and have a talk about it. Good things, bad things, expectations, outcomes, above, and under et cetera. From my perspective as an European (but likely of any viewer, really), it would be awfully interesting to hear everyone talk shop about the project, common US/NA standards, things done right vs things done wrong, maybe a little Q&A with viewer submitted queries. Something like two episodes, as an epilogue to the story that is the Spec House.
  • @bobwatkins1271
    My shoulder is sore from watching Phil use that manual expander.
  • @MadDog6945
    I like Phil's haircut. Makes me nostalgic for the early 80's.
  • @n3qdz
    Loving the series! One thing as a low voltage guy we use to do in drilling into the joists I found many times the knock out wold not line up. Running long runs with many wires in them would cause a ton of issues for the jackets besides it looked crappy. What I would like to do is drill one hole at the beginning of the run, then get a laser level shoot it through the first hole and it would shine to the next joist. Because its lever and it shows the laser light point it shows me exactly where it put my drill bit point no measuring and marking. this was a hug time saver. All my holes were laser straight and correct placement within the web of the engineered joist my GC's loved it. Now because everything was on the same plane and in a row the runs went SUPER fast with no damage to my wires. Just a tip I use to use when I was in the trades.
  • @roar40s
    Okay, now you're an expert! LOL This guy should have his own channel. I'd watch it.
  • @30shandala
    Phil is a deceptively sharp fella, Scott-as well as interesting and funny.
  • @whitey211
    "I was really short then." Best way to say that I've ever heard.
  • @kd2rdhlarry571
    I worked for a plumber for years, pride makes the jobs look as good as they work, pvc cement fumes make plumber sense of humor entertaining.
  • @DeliveryMcGee
    "What's the best water pipe? Inconel X-750. It'd be expensive, though." worth watching just for that joke.
  • ā€œBut thatā€™s when plumbers were real menā€! I love that quote! šŸ˜€
  • @Gnuckle
    Real people, doing real jobs. Taking real pride in their work. Love it!
  • @Nickgowans
    Phil is brilliant, entertaining and very insiteful. Would be nice to see him on your channel again in the future :) maybe he could have his own series of videos.
  • I get excited when I go into an old house and see a plumber or electricians good work. I really do appreciate it. Most don't find it interesting.
  • @SpaceDave3000
    Hah! "We'll eyeball it if we have pride in our work." That's vocational mastery right there. Champion.
  • @DanielinLaTuna
    Okay, hereā€™s the real dope on why the larger diameter pipe wants to push back apart: the ā€œglueā€ isnā€™t a glue, itā€™s actually a solvent. And what heā€™s doing isnā€™t gluing, but solvent welding. So what happens is that the plastic meltsā€” gets a little mushy ā€” and expands in volume. Thatā€™s why you have to hold it together for about thirty seconds. (Itā€™s good practice to do the same with the smaller diameter pipe, too.) By the way, thatā€™s why you should ALWAYS give the pipe a twist while pressing them (pipe, fittings, etc) together ā€” it assures better distribution of the solvent and mixing of the two surfaces. Best practice is to dry-fit the parts, mark the orientations, take them apart and ā€œglueā€, twisting to the orientation mark. Also, primer isnā€™t a waste of time. It dries quickly (in fact you can apply the solvent as soon as youā€™ve primed, because the pieces are ready by the time youā€™ve returned the primer brush to the can and dipped the solvent brush.) One more tip: donā€™t overdo the solvent ā€” you donā€™t want it puddling inside the pipe.