Is all copper pipe pretty much the same?
Is there different levels of quality in copper plumbing pipe? I see copper pipe at Home Depot and I assume plumbing supply stores sell it too. Does pretty much everybody sell the same quality of copper pipe, or are there differences I should be aware of?
By copper pipe, I mean the typical 1/2" and 3/4" copper pipe used in residential plumbing applications.
plumbing pipe
add a comment |
Is there different levels of quality in copper plumbing pipe? I see copper pipe at Home Depot and I assume plumbing supply stores sell it too. Does pretty much everybody sell the same quality of copper pipe, or are there differences I should be aware of?
By copper pipe, I mean the typical 1/2" and 3/4" copper pipe used in residential plumbing applications.
plumbing pipe
There are 2 types (L and M) thin and thick walled familyhandyman.com/plumbing/plumbing-repair/copper-pipe-types
– Kris
13 hours ago
Usually it changhes in thickness: 0,8mm 1mm, 1,2mm, 1,5mm, 1,65mm, 2mm, 2,5mm. Mosto common is 0,8 and 1
– DDS
13 hours ago
add a comment |
Is there different levels of quality in copper plumbing pipe? I see copper pipe at Home Depot and I assume plumbing supply stores sell it too. Does pretty much everybody sell the same quality of copper pipe, or are there differences I should be aware of?
By copper pipe, I mean the typical 1/2" and 3/4" copper pipe used in residential plumbing applications.
plumbing pipe
Is there different levels of quality in copper plumbing pipe? I see copper pipe at Home Depot and I assume plumbing supply stores sell it too. Does pretty much everybody sell the same quality of copper pipe, or are there differences I should be aware of?
By copper pipe, I mean the typical 1/2" and 3/4" copper pipe used in residential plumbing applications.
plumbing pipe
plumbing pipe
asked 13 hours ago
Tyler DurdenTyler Durden
4,19321541
4,19321541
There are 2 types (L and M) thin and thick walled familyhandyman.com/plumbing/plumbing-repair/copper-pipe-types
– Kris
13 hours ago
Usually it changhes in thickness: 0,8mm 1mm, 1,2mm, 1,5mm, 1,65mm, 2mm, 2,5mm. Mosto common is 0,8 and 1
– DDS
13 hours ago
add a comment |
There are 2 types (L and M) thin and thick walled familyhandyman.com/plumbing/plumbing-repair/copper-pipe-types
– Kris
13 hours ago
Usually it changhes in thickness: 0,8mm 1mm, 1,2mm, 1,5mm, 1,65mm, 2mm, 2,5mm. Mosto common is 0,8 and 1
– DDS
13 hours ago
There are 2 types (L and M) thin and thick walled familyhandyman.com/plumbing/plumbing-repair/copper-pipe-types
– Kris
13 hours ago
There are 2 types (L and M) thin and thick walled familyhandyman.com/plumbing/plumbing-repair/copper-pipe-types
– Kris
13 hours ago
Usually it changhes in thickness: 0,8mm 1mm, 1,2mm, 1,5mm, 1,65mm, 2mm, 2,5mm. Mosto common is 0,8 and 1
– DDS
13 hours ago
Usually it changhes in thickness: 0,8mm 1mm, 1,2mm, 1,5mm, 1,65mm, 2mm, 2,5mm. Mosto common is 0,8 and 1
– DDS
13 hours ago
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
There are different grades and types of copper pipe that you of course should be aware of. However I think your question is whether copper pipe is really a commodity type product - whether there's a difference between products of the same grade / type made by various manufacturers and sold by various retailers and wholesalers.
This is a common question but it's a tough one.
One the one hand, there are standards that apply to these products and any product that meets the standard should be adequate for the purpose. That may lead you to conclude that standardization makes these products essentially commodities.
On the other hand, big retailers press manufacturers very very hard for low pricing, and are not nearly as tough on quality; DIY customers are not as demanding as the plumbing contractors, maintenance people, etc. that shop at plumbing supply houses catering to contractors. Big box retailers are going to cater to their customers and their customers are primarily concerned with price.
It's very possible that in some cases the same product from the same manufacturer is identical quality whether purchased in a big box store or in a specialty supply house. It's also very possible that a brand may have to lower their quality (within acceptable standards) to win a spot in a big box store. It's even possible that a manufacturer may make the same exact product to a higher standard for supply houses and to a lower standard for big box retailers.
In my opinion, I have seen all three of these scenarios unfold over the last ten years as big box stores have grown and become more powerful in the market.
I have one nitpick , as far as manufacturers go, there is very little upside in maintaining multiple production lines for specific customers or binning/selective testing for the same part number for commodity type products, if you are purchasing the same part number from a big box vs contractor retailer it should not differ within the stated spec, if there is a unique part number or part number suffix for one retailer then that is cause to worry. On the other hand when a big box retailer places a large order, they may not have their "Best Shift" running the line
– crasic
6 hours ago
@crasic - I think you definitely have a point but it depends on the product, in some cases it's not worth while to differentiate but in others it is.
– batsplatsterson
4 hours ago
Sure, no argument, but the second point I am getting at is a manufacturer who reuses the same part number for effectively multiple parts would not be reputable regardless of where you buy it.
– crasic
3 hours ago
I remember when working for a window and door manufacturer that a certain orange colored big box store accounted for over 35% of the annual company sales. Needless to say they had a significant bargaining chip!
– corsiKa
3 hours ago
add a comment |
There is copper tubing and there is copper water tube as defined in ASTM B-88. Tubing is usually soft and comes in coils. Water tubing is usually cold drawn and comes in straight lengths. K, L, and M are different wall thicknesses of water tubing ; an example for size 3/4 " is- K = 0.065", L= 0.045", and M = 0.032". All 3/4 copper water tube has a 0.875 " outer diameter. ( My ASTM B 88 is old but they don't change these dimensions.) . However K is often annealed so also comes in coils. Tubing and water tubing are the same composition , more or less pure copper. So ASTM B 88 water tubing is the moral equivalent of pipe but with a different name.
add a comment |
There are a few different kinds of copper pipe at Home Depot (and I assume other home stores). For rigid copper pipe, there is Type M and Type L.
Type M is thinner walled and normally has red markings on it. Type L is quite a bit thicker and will have blue markings. The color of the markings could be brand specific, but that's what I'm used to seeing.
Also there is bendable copper that is normally used for A/C lines. It is sold in rolls and usually not used for water.
The letters don't stand for anything. They are in alphabetical order. There is also Type K which is thicker and made for direct burial, but its not usually found in retail stores.
add a comment |
There are many different types of copper.
There are hard measured by inside diameter drawn and soft drawn measured by outside diameter.
Of the hard drawn (pipe lengths) there are type DWV, M, L and K. DWV is the thinnest and K is the thickest. For residential type K is not used often and type M is the most common.
Soft drawn (coils) come in the same types but a 5/8 soft copper fits in a 1/2 copper fitting...
The reason for the seemingly over complicated answer is that Home Depot and Lowe's will sell soft copper rolls in 1/2 inch and 3/4 that are domestic waste and vent (type DWV).
The two types a DIYer will run into are M and L. But watch out for the soft copper from big box hardware stores.
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "73"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});
function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});
}
});
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fdiy.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f159665%2fis-all-copper-pipe-pretty-much-the-same%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
There are different grades and types of copper pipe that you of course should be aware of. However I think your question is whether copper pipe is really a commodity type product - whether there's a difference between products of the same grade / type made by various manufacturers and sold by various retailers and wholesalers.
This is a common question but it's a tough one.
One the one hand, there are standards that apply to these products and any product that meets the standard should be adequate for the purpose. That may lead you to conclude that standardization makes these products essentially commodities.
On the other hand, big retailers press manufacturers very very hard for low pricing, and are not nearly as tough on quality; DIY customers are not as demanding as the plumbing contractors, maintenance people, etc. that shop at plumbing supply houses catering to contractors. Big box retailers are going to cater to their customers and their customers are primarily concerned with price.
It's very possible that in some cases the same product from the same manufacturer is identical quality whether purchased in a big box store or in a specialty supply house. It's also very possible that a brand may have to lower their quality (within acceptable standards) to win a spot in a big box store. It's even possible that a manufacturer may make the same exact product to a higher standard for supply houses and to a lower standard for big box retailers.
In my opinion, I have seen all three of these scenarios unfold over the last ten years as big box stores have grown and become more powerful in the market.
I have one nitpick , as far as manufacturers go, there is very little upside in maintaining multiple production lines for specific customers or binning/selective testing for the same part number for commodity type products, if you are purchasing the same part number from a big box vs contractor retailer it should not differ within the stated spec, if there is a unique part number or part number suffix for one retailer then that is cause to worry. On the other hand when a big box retailer places a large order, they may not have their "Best Shift" running the line
– crasic
6 hours ago
@crasic - I think you definitely have a point but it depends on the product, in some cases it's not worth while to differentiate but in others it is.
– batsplatsterson
4 hours ago
Sure, no argument, but the second point I am getting at is a manufacturer who reuses the same part number for effectively multiple parts would not be reputable regardless of where you buy it.
– crasic
3 hours ago
I remember when working for a window and door manufacturer that a certain orange colored big box store accounted for over 35% of the annual company sales. Needless to say they had a significant bargaining chip!
– corsiKa
3 hours ago
add a comment |
There are different grades and types of copper pipe that you of course should be aware of. However I think your question is whether copper pipe is really a commodity type product - whether there's a difference between products of the same grade / type made by various manufacturers and sold by various retailers and wholesalers.
This is a common question but it's a tough one.
One the one hand, there are standards that apply to these products and any product that meets the standard should be adequate for the purpose. That may lead you to conclude that standardization makes these products essentially commodities.
On the other hand, big retailers press manufacturers very very hard for low pricing, and are not nearly as tough on quality; DIY customers are not as demanding as the plumbing contractors, maintenance people, etc. that shop at plumbing supply houses catering to contractors. Big box retailers are going to cater to their customers and their customers are primarily concerned with price.
It's very possible that in some cases the same product from the same manufacturer is identical quality whether purchased in a big box store or in a specialty supply house. It's also very possible that a brand may have to lower their quality (within acceptable standards) to win a spot in a big box store. It's even possible that a manufacturer may make the same exact product to a higher standard for supply houses and to a lower standard for big box retailers.
In my opinion, I have seen all three of these scenarios unfold over the last ten years as big box stores have grown and become more powerful in the market.
I have one nitpick , as far as manufacturers go, there is very little upside in maintaining multiple production lines for specific customers or binning/selective testing for the same part number for commodity type products, if you are purchasing the same part number from a big box vs contractor retailer it should not differ within the stated spec, if there is a unique part number or part number suffix for one retailer then that is cause to worry. On the other hand when a big box retailer places a large order, they may not have their "Best Shift" running the line
– crasic
6 hours ago
@crasic - I think you definitely have a point but it depends on the product, in some cases it's not worth while to differentiate but in others it is.
– batsplatsterson
4 hours ago
Sure, no argument, but the second point I am getting at is a manufacturer who reuses the same part number for effectively multiple parts would not be reputable regardless of where you buy it.
– crasic
3 hours ago
I remember when working for a window and door manufacturer that a certain orange colored big box store accounted for over 35% of the annual company sales. Needless to say they had a significant bargaining chip!
– corsiKa
3 hours ago
add a comment |
There are different grades and types of copper pipe that you of course should be aware of. However I think your question is whether copper pipe is really a commodity type product - whether there's a difference between products of the same grade / type made by various manufacturers and sold by various retailers and wholesalers.
This is a common question but it's a tough one.
One the one hand, there are standards that apply to these products and any product that meets the standard should be adequate for the purpose. That may lead you to conclude that standardization makes these products essentially commodities.
On the other hand, big retailers press manufacturers very very hard for low pricing, and are not nearly as tough on quality; DIY customers are not as demanding as the plumbing contractors, maintenance people, etc. that shop at plumbing supply houses catering to contractors. Big box retailers are going to cater to their customers and their customers are primarily concerned with price.
It's very possible that in some cases the same product from the same manufacturer is identical quality whether purchased in a big box store or in a specialty supply house. It's also very possible that a brand may have to lower their quality (within acceptable standards) to win a spot in a big box store. It's even possible that a manufacturer may make the same exact product to a higher standard for supply houses and to a lower standard for big box retailers.
In my opinion, I have seen all three of these scenarios unfold over the last ten years as big box stores have grown and become more powerful in the market.
There are different grades and types of copper pipe that you of course should be aware of. However I think your question is whether copper pipe is really a commodity type product - whether there's a difference between products of the same grade / type made by various manufacturers and sold by various retailers and wholesalers.
This is a common question but it's a tough one.
One the one hand, there are standards that apply to these products and any product that meets the standard should be adequate for the purpose. That may lead you to conclude that standardization makes these products essentially commodities.
On the other hand, big retailers press manufacturers very very hard for low pricing, and are not nearly as tough on quality; DIY customers are not as demanding as the plumbing contractors, maintenance people, etc. that shop at plumbing supply houses catering to contractors. Big box retailers are going to cater to their customers and their customers are primarily concerned with price.
It's very possible that in some cases the same product from the same manufacturer is identical quality whether purchased in a big box store or in a specialty supply house. It's also very possible that a brand may have to lower their quality (within acceptable standards) to win a spot in a big box store. It's even possible that a manufacturer may make the same exact product to a higher standard for supply houses and to a lower standard for big box retailers.
In my opinion, I have seen all three of these scenarios unfold over the last ten years as big box stores have grown and become more powerful in the market.
edited 11 hours ago
answered 11 hours ago
batsplatstersonbatsplatsterson
13.1k11538
13.1k11538
I have one nitpick , as far as manufacturers go, there is very little upside in maintaining multiple production lines for specific customers or binning/selective testing for the same part number for commodity type products, if you are purchasing the same part number from a big box vs contractor retailer it should not differ within the stated spec, if there is a unique part number or part number suffix for one retailer then that is cause to worry. On the other hand when a big box retailer places a large order, they may not have their "Best Shift" running the line
– crasic
6 hours ago
@crasic - I think you definitely have a point but it depends on the product, in some cases it's not worth while to differentiate but in others it is.
– batsplatsterson
4 hours ago
Sure, no argument, but the second point I am getting at is a manufacturer who reuses the same part number for effectively multiple parts would not be reputable regardless of where you buy it.
– crasic
3 hours ago
I remember when working for a window and door manufacturer that a certain orange colored big box store accounted for over 35% of the annual company sales. Needless to say they had a significant bargaining chip!
– corsiKa
3 hours ago
add a comment |
I have one nitpick , as far as manufacturers go, there is very little upside in maintaining multiple production lines for specific customers or binning/selective testing for the same part number for commodity type products, if you are purchasing the same part number from a big box vs contractor retailer it should not differ within the stated spec, if there is a unique part number or part number suffix for one retailer then that is cause to worry. On the other hand when a big box retailer places a large order, they may not have their "Best Shift" running the line
– crasic
6 hours ago
@crasic - I think you definitely have a point but it depends on the product, in some cases it's not worth while to differentiate but in others it is.
– batsplatsterson
4 hours ago
Sure, no argument, but the second point I am getting at is a manufacturer who reuses the same part number for effectively multiple parts would not be reputable regardless of where you buy it.
– crasic
3 hours ago
I remember when working for a window and door manufacturer that a certain orange colored big box store accounted for over 35% of the annual company sales. Needless to say they had a significant bargaining chip!
– corsiKa
3 hours ago
I have one nitpick , as far as manufacturers go, there is very little upside in maintaining multiple production lines for specific customers or binning/selective testing for the same part number for commodity type products, if you are purchasing the same part number from a big box vs contractor retailer it should not differ within the stated spec, if there is a unique part number or part number suffix for one retailer then that is cause to worry. On the other hand when a big box retailer places a large order, they may not have their "Best Shift" running the line
– crasic
6 hours ago
I have one nitpick , as far as manufacturers go, there is very little upside in maintaining multiple production lines for specific customers or binning/selective testing for the same part number for commodity type products, if you are purchasing the same part number from a big box vs contractor retailer it should not differ within the stated spec, if there is a unique part number or part number suffix for one retailer then that is cause to worry. On the other hand when a big box retailer places a large order, they may not have their "Best Shift" running the line
– crasic
6 hours ago
@crasic - I think you definitely have a point but it depends on the product, in some cases it's not worth while to differentiate but in others it is.
– batsplatsterson
4 hours ago
@crasic - I think you definitely have a point but it depends on the product, in some cases it's not worth while to differentiate but in others it is.
– batsplatsterson
4 hours ago
Sure, no argument, but the second point I am getting at is a manufacturer who reuses the same part number for effectively multiple parts would not be reputable regardless of where you buy it.
– crasic
3 hours ago
Sure, no argument, but the second point I am getting at is a manufacturer who reuses the same part number for effectively multiple parts would not be reputable regardless of where you buy it.
– crasic
3 hours ago
I remember when working for a window and door manufacturer that a certain orange colored big box store accounted for over 35% of the annual company sales. Needless to say they had a significant bargaining chip!
– corsiKa
3 hours ago
I remember when working for a window and door manufacturer that a certain orange colored big box store accounted for over 35% of the annual company sales. Needless to say they had a significant bargaining chip!
– corsiKa
3 hours ago
add a comment |
There is copper tubing and there is copper water tube as defined in ASTM B-88. Tubing is usually soft and comes in coils. Water tubing is usually cold drawn and comes in straight lengths. K, L, and M are different wall thicknesses of water tubing ; an example for size 3/4 " is- K = 0.065", L= 0.045", and M = 0.032". All 3/4 copper water tube has a 0.875 " outer diameter. ( My ASTM B 88 is old but they don't change these dimensions.) . However K is often annealed so also comes in coils. Tubing and water tubing are the same composition , more or less pure copper. So ASTM B 88 water tubing is the moral equivalent of pipe but with a different name.
add a comment |
There is copper tubing and there is copper water tube as defined in ASTM B-88. Tubing is usually soft and comes in coils. Water tubing is usually cold drawn and comes in straight lengths. K, L, and M are different wall thicknesses of water tubing ; an example for size 3/4 " is- K = 0.065", L= 0.045", and M = 0.032". All 3/4 copper water tube has a 0.875 " outer diameter. ( My ASTM B 88 is old but they don't change these dimensions.) . However K is often annealed so also comes in coils. Tubing and water tubing are the same composition , more or less pure copper. So ASTM B 88 water tubing is the moral equivalent of pipe but with a different name.
add a comment |
There is copper tubing and there is copper water tube as defined in ASTM B-88. Tubing is usually soft and comes in coils. Water tubing is usually cold drawn and comes in straight lengths. K, L, and M are different wall thicknesses of water tubing ; an example for size 3/4 " is- K = 0.065", L= 0.045", and M = 0.032". All 3/4 copper water tube has a 0.875 " outer diameter. ( My ASTM B 88 is old but they don't change these dimensions.) . However K is often annealed so also comes in coils. Tubing and water tubing are the same composition , more or less pure copper. So ASTM B 88 water tubing is the moral equivalent of pipe but with a different name.
There is copper tubing and there is copper water tube as defined in ASTM B-88. Tubing is usually soft and comes in coils. Water tubing is usually cold drawn and comes in straight lengths. K, L, and M are different wall thicknesses of water tubing ; an example for size 3/4 " is- K = 0.065", L= 0.045", and M = 0.032". All 3/4 copper water tube has a 0.875 " outer diameter. ( My ASTM B 88 is old but they don't change these dimensions.) . However K is often annealed so also comes in coils. Tubing and water tubing are the same composition , more or less pure copper. So ASTM B 88 water tubing is the moral equivalent of pipe but with a different name.
answered 11 hours ago
blacksmith37blacksmith37
1,38827
1,38827
add a comment |
add a comment |
There are a few different kinds of copper pipe at Home Depot (and I assume other home stores). For rigid copper pipe, there is Type M and Type L.
Type M is thinner walled and normally has red markings on it. Type L is quite a bit thicker and will have blue markings. The color of the markings could be brand specific, but that's what I'm used to seeing.
Also there is bendable copper that is normally used for A/C lines. It is sold in rolls and usually not used for water.
The letters don't stand for anything. They are in alphabetical order. There is also Type K which is thicker and made for direct burial, but its not usually found in retail stores.
add a comment |
There are a few different kinds of copper pipe at Home Depot (and I assume other home stores). For rigid copper pipe, there is Type M and Type L.
Type M is thinner walled and normally has red markings on it. Type L is quite a bit thicker and will have blue markings. The color of the markings could be brand specific, but that's what I'm used to seeing.
Also there is bendable copper that is normally used for A/C lines. It is sold in rolls and usually not used for water.
The letters don't stand for anything. They are in alphabetical order. There is also Type K which is thicker and made for direct burial, but its not usually found in retail stores.
add a comment |
There are a few different kinds of copper pipe at Home Depot (and I assume other home stores). For rigid copper pipe, there is Type M and Type L.
Type M is thinner walled and normally has red markings on it. Type L is quite a bit thicker and will have blue markings. The color of the markings could be brand specific, but that's what I'm used to seeing.
Also there is bendable copper that is normally used for A/C lines. It is sold in rolls and usually not used for water.
The letters don't stand for anything. They are in alphabetical order. There is also Type K which is thicker and made for direct burial, but its not usually found in retail stores.
There are a few different kinds of copper pipe at Home Depot (and I assume other home stores). For rigid copper pipe, there is Type M and Type L.
Type M is thinner walled and normally has red markings on it. Type L is quite a bit thicker and will have blue markings. The color of the markings could be brand specific, but that's what I'm used to seeing.
Also there is bendable copper that is normally used for A/C lines. It is sold in rolls and usually not used for water.
The letters don't stand for anything. They are in alphabetical order. There is also Type K which is thicker and made for direct burial, but its not usually found in retail stores.
answered 13 hours ago
JPhi1618JPhi1618
9,42812145
9,42812145
add a comment |
add a comment |
There are many different types of copper.
There are hard measured by inside diameter drawn and soft drawn measured by outside diameter.
Of the hard drawn (pipe lengths) there are type DWV, M, L and K. DWV is the thinnest and K is the thickest. For residential type K is not used often and type M is the most common.
Soft drawn (coils) come in the same types but a 5/8 soft copper fits in a 1/2 copper fitting...
The reason for the seemingly over complicated answer is that Home Depot and Lowe's will sell soft copper rolls in 1/2 inch and 3/4 that are domestic waste and vent (type DWV).
The two types a DIYer will run into are M and L. But watch out for the soft copper from big box hardware stores.
add a comment |
There are many different types of copper.
There are hard measured by inside diameter drawn and soft drawn measured by outside diameter.
Of the hard drawn (pipe lengths) there are type DWV, M, L and K. DWV is the thinnest and K is the thickest. For residential type K is not used often and type M is the most common.
Soft drawn (coils) come in the same types but a 5/8 soft copper fits in a 1/2 copper fitting...
The reason for the seemingly over complicated answer is that Home Depot and Lowe's will sell soft copper rolls in 1/2 inch and 3/4 that are domestic waste and vent (type DWV).
The two types a DIYer will run into are M and L. But watch out for the soft copper from big box hardware stores.
add a comment |
There are many different types of copper.
There are hard measured by inside diameter drawn and soft drawn measured by outside diameter.
Of the hard drawn (pipe lengths) there are type DWV, M, L and K. DWV is the thinnest and K is the thickest. For residential type K is not used often and type M is the most common.
Soft drawn (coils) come in the same types but a 5/8 soft copper fits in a 1/2 copper fitting...
The reason for the seemingly over complicated answer is that Home Depot and Lowe's will sell soft copper rolls in 1/2 inch and 3/4 that are domestic waste and vent (type DWV).
The two types a DIYer will run into are M and L. But watch out for the soft copper from big box hardware stores.
There are many different types of copper.
There are hard measured by inside diameter drawn and soft drawn measured by outside diameter.
Of the hard drawn (pipe lengths) there are type DWV, M, L and K. DWV is the thinnest and K is the thickest. For residential type K is not used often and type M is the most common.
Soft drawn (coils) come in the same types but a 5/8 soft copper fits in a 1/2 copper fitting...
The reason for the seemingly over complicated answer is that Home Depot and Lowe's will sell soft copper rolls in 1/2 inch and 3/4 that are domestic waste and vent (type DWV).
The two types a DIYer will run into are M and L. But watch out for the soft copper from big box hardware stores.
answered 13 hours ago
Joe FalaJoe Fala
3,086121
3,086121
add a comment |
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Home Improvement Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fdiy.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f159665%2fis-all-copper-pipe-pretty-much-the-same%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
There are 2 types (L and M) thin and thick walled familyhandyman.com/plumbing/plumbing-repair/copper-pipe-types
– Kris
13 hours ago
Usually it changhes in thickness: 0,8mm 1mm, 1,2mm, 1,5mm, 1,65mm, 2mm, 2,5mm. Mosto common is 0,8 and 1
– DDS
13 hours ago