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Rural Irrigation/Remote Faucets Methods ??
On 7/1/2011 4:31 AM, FarmI wrote:
"Bob wrote in message ... Stormin Mormon wrote: First thing comes to mind, is sunlight and the UV rays. So, what you use should be UV resistant. White PVC tubing might work for a while. The cost of fittings might add up. Typically sold in 10 foot lengths, and the tubing is relatively rigid. White PVC will be weakened by UV. Works great buried. The new "Pex" stuff they sell for indoor water tubing may work, but not sure how UV resistant it is. Most Pex is easily damaged by UV. They also sell some grey tubing for electrical conduit, which might be more UV resistant, but not sure it's used for outdoor water. It's not rated for that. Which brings us back to black poly pipe. Ah! Thank you for mentioning it. Given all the other posts where there has been no mention of black polypipe except for a very early post, but some other things I've never heard of and UV, I was beginning to wonder if black polypipe hadn't made it to US. Back in the late 1950's and early 1960's, 2 inch black poly pipe is what my father used to get water from our spring's pump house to the water system at our home on the farm. We had to make sure the buried pipe was in a bed of sand because 200 yards of plastic pipe will move when pressurized. On more than one occasion a small stone would rub a hole into the pipe so we had to dig it up, patch the pipe with a plastic coupling then rebury it with sand around it. I remember the pipe as having a fairly thick wall and not being very flexible. TDD |
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