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Beef Up Your PEX IQ

By 1way On January 29, 2010 Under Contributors

“Location, location, location” is still a mantra espoused by property buyers and sellers alike. Whether you are a house flipper or a house purchaser with new ambitions for an aging house, it’s a good idea to do your preparation.

Find out about the neighborhood and obtain yourself a top notch home inspector who talks frankly and bluntly. A verbal misinterpretation can contribute to many rough surprises once you get into the firestorm of renovation.

There are so many house construction innovations accessible to the DIYer or pro, and it behooves you to travel to home shows, explore the Internet, take courses, sign up to industry mags and talk to individuals well weathered in the biz. Some good base info will assist you in factoring in remodeling costs accurately and help you in acquiring the best solutions for your trouble areas.

Among the new sensations in house refurbishment is elastic PEX tubing, cross-linked polyethylene hosing that makes plumbing modernisations less of a head ache. Not only is it flexible and lightweight, it is more cost-effective than copper by a country mile!

Piping made of PEX provides DIYers with choices that were not readily accessible to refinishers in the U.S. prior to the 1980s. PEX Pipe can be used in radiant floor heat systems and water supply manifold units. It can be drawn into difficult places in older houses that never had double sinks or a spa shower off the master bedchamber or washer-dryer unit in the upstairs hall closet.

Because it is so elastic, PEX can make directional changes easy, doing away with the frequency of coupling joints or soldering – greatly reducing the risk of leakage. (For example, a 3/8- inch hose can be turned into a small 4-inch bend.)

PEX Plumbing depots are available across the land with sophisticated websites with digital photos, how-to videos, merchandise descriptions, pricing and user-friendly shopping cart pages. Hardware stores and local PEX supply enterprises provide that personalized conversation that DIYers might want to work out what is correct for their particular restoration project.

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