06-29-2020, 05:48 PM
Put in a new p-trap and pipe section under the sink. Noticed that I had a leak on a glued connection, which was rather surprising. I watched some videos on YouTube to try to figure out what I was doing wrong, and I realized that the guys on YouTube were using A LOT more glue than I was. Purple primer was the same, but I was only putting a bit of glue on both the male and female, wiping a lot off on the inside of the glue can. So I redid things and used a lot of glue. No leaks.
My son was helping me and we went out in the garage with some left over fittings and pipe and played around with it. Using a lot of glue we got water-tight connections, but we noticed a fair amount of glue was sort of spooging out into the pipe or connection. When we were all done and had held it for 30 seconds, we could see the dried glue down inside the pipe.
We talked it over and said that these were all for drains, so a bit of extra glue inside the pipe probably wasn't a big deal. Thoughts on this? The technique we settled on was bringing the glue dipper out of the jar, letting it hand for about two seconds and then wiping off the little tail, and then smearing that on the pipe and fitting. Is the general consensus that more glue is better than less?
My son was helping me and we went out in the garage with some left over fittings and pipe and played around with it. Using a lot of glue we got water-tight connections, but we noticed a fair amount of glue was sort of spooging out into the pipe or connection. When we were all done and had held it for 30 seconds, we could see the dried glue down inside the pipe.
We talked it over and said that these were all for drains, so a bit of extra glue inside the pipe probably wasn't a big deal. Thoughts on this? The technique we settled on was bringing the glue dipper out of the jar, letting it hand for about two seconds and then wiping off the little tail, and then smearing that on the pipe and fitting. Is the general consensus that more glue is better than less?