bcarwell
Gold Member
I have a vertical 3/4" copper pipe I just cut a section out of which froze and cracked. Now I'm replacing it with a new piece of pipe and two standard slip joints- one on either end. My question is how do you sweat solder when the joints are vertical ? I know how to solder and I know about capillary action sucking in the solder even vertically, and that you make the part hottest in the direction you want the solder to flow. But: once you've soldered in one side of the slip joint when soldering the other side won't it heat up the side you just soldered to cause the solder to flow out ? What order should I solder the joints in or does it matter ? Should I first solder on the slip joints onto the piece of replacement pipe at my workbench so I only have two joints left to solder when I put the replacement pipe in place ? Still seems like in doing so I'd be heating other side of the slip joint that I had soldered at my bench. And how long should the spliced-in piece of pipe be or does it matter ? Just a few inches long to replace all the bulged pipe where the crack was ?
Thanks for any tips (or reassurances if it will work just fine)...
Bob
Thanks for any tips (or reassurances if it will work just fine)...
Bob