Home Improvement Asked on August 27, 2021
About 20 years ago we were experiencing pin hole leaks. Our plumber thought it was because originally the house was on well water. Rather than deal with each leak one at a time, we eventually had him do an extensive repipe of the house. All was well until this year – one of the pipes (luckily exposed) in our basement has had two pinhole leaks in the past few months. The leaks were not at joints.
So a couple of questions:
Is the theory about well water being the cause reasonable?
At the time I believe the plumber also said this type of problem would be less of an issue with hot water pipes, but the leaks this year were in a hot water pipe. Is that true? If so, could it just be a "bad" pipe?
Thanks.
High mineral counts can be a problem, not having proper dielectric unions and my opinion CHEAP pipe. I have seen cheap pipe have 50 pinholes where the rest of the house was fine the funny thing we could still see the stamps on the pipes and it was the cheap brand that had all the leaks. Replaced those sections and 10 years later the rest of the pipes are still fine, just the thinner cheap copper was the problem.
Answered by Ed Beal on August 27, 2021
Strangely enough both very high PH and very low PH water can each cause corrosion in copper pipes resulting in pinhole leaks. Turbulence in pipes caused by too many 90 degree elbows is also considered to be a causative factor. As Ed mentions the situation is exacerbated when cheap (thin) copper pipes are installed.
I'm not ready to get 100% behind PEX yet - not enough history there to date. However, my suggestion is:
Answered by HoneyDo on August 27, 2021
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