Home Inspection - What Are The Problems With Polybutylene Pipes? - YouTube

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Mark: Hi, it’s Mark from Top Local Lead Generation.
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We’re here today with Mr. David Fairbairn of Fairbairn Inspection in Vancouver.
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He’s Vancouver’s mold expert and a fantastic home inspector, how’re you doing today David?
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David: I’m great Mark considering I’m in a crawlspace.
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Mark: So, we’re broadcasting right from someone’s crawlspace.
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I want to talk about the problems with poly‪butylene‬ piping.
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What’s the deal?‬
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David: I’m glad we’re in a crawlspace today Mark, because this is a great opportunity
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for us to see, I want to show you exactly what it looks like and some of the problems
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with it.
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So if you’re not familiar with poly‪butylene‬ pipes, it’s a grey plastic pipe that was
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extremely popular back in the ’80’s and the first half of the ’90’s particularly
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in our area, in Vancouver, you seen a lot of these in homes built anytime after 1980.
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So what I’d like to do is go through the pros and cons of it and what to expect if
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you’re buying a house that has poly‪butylene‬ pipe in it.
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I don’t fee like saying poly‪butylene‬ every time, so I’m going to say PolyB - that’s
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the name that everybody refers to it by - so we’re talking about PolyB pipes.‬‬‬
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So what we’ve got here, is a house that was build in 1985 and if you look, we’ve
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got some great plastic pipes here in the crawlspace, these are poly‪butylene‬ plastic.
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These were invented in 1978, so any house built after 1978 could have it.
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It largely replaced copper for most homes where cost was an issue and ease of installation.
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You know, PolyB was supposed to be the next big thing and the reason they like it is there’s
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no soldering involved.
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You could just assemble it, it’s very easy to put together on site and the big thing
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here is that it’s flexible.
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When you’re dealing with plastic pipe, you can bend it around different angles, it’s
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not like rigid copper where you have to create elbows everywhere to work it around obstructions.
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So from an installation standpoint this is a very cool back in the time.
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So what we’re looking at here is a poly‪butylene‬ with plastic fittings.
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We have plastic fittings at all the connection points, all our T’s and straight fittings
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are all plastic.
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This is known as a bit of a problematic type piping.
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‬‬
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The house I’m in right now has actually had a pinhole leak, so the owner of this house,
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they had at their hot water tank, they actually had a leak already and that’s because PolyB
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has had a history of failure and that’s why we don’t use it anymore.
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So after they developed it, they put it out in a lot of houses, there was a lot of bursting
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at fittings, we had the pipe itself splitting and eventually there was a class action lawsuit.
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So when there was the class action lawsuit, the piping got a really bad name for itself
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- and of course, it’s no longer manufactured.
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I’d like to show you the there generations of poly‪butylene‬ pipe and which ones
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to look out for and which one are not as bad.‬
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I’d like to screen share with you, just let me know when it comes up.
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We’ve got some photos to share of what the different types of PolyB look like.
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So what we’re looking at here, this is a very early generation poly‪butylene‬ fitting
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- which is a compression fit style.
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So what they would do with these compression nuts, they would tighten them, they’re also
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called grip fittings.
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This is something you would see in a very old PolyB installation, probably very early
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80’s.
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If you see this type of pipe, there is a pretty good chance that you either had failure already
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or a leak already.
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Usually you don’t even see this type of piping because it’s already been, the house
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has already been re-piped.
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So this is the early generation of the stuff.‬
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If you go to the next generation, that’s actually the same stuff we’re looking at
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in the crawlspace here.
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This is our plastic fitted poly‪butylene‬.
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You can see at the T’s where they connect, you’ve got these metal rings here and they
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are a crimp fitting.
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So you have these plastic fittings, you would slide the pipe overtop of the fitting and
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with a crimp tool you would crush down these rings and they would grab onto the fitting
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and compress it down.
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So this is what we have right now in this house from 1985.
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So you see the plastic fittings, they’re not great, they have a history of bursting
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and splitting.
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This would be your high risk style as well.
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If you see this in your house, there is a pretty good chance it at some point in the
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future, you’re going to have to re-pipe your house.‬
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So on to the third style.
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This is something you’d see a bit later on - more in the 90’s with this style of
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pipe which is the metal fittings.
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So the metal fittings were introduced in response to some issues with the plastic fittings,
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so they’re a little bit more robust.
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What I usually like to say is it’s the least bad kind of PolyB to have.
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It’s not perfect, there still can be some problems with it but it’s of the three,
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if you had to pick one, this should be your top choice.
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So those are the three types of PolyB.
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Mark: So that second one was more of a white colour.
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The PolyB isn’t always just grey?
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David: PolyB came in a few different colours.
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Sometimes when you have your service entry piping coming in from the city they did use
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some different colours.
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I have seen where it actually looks like a different product altogether.
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The best way to determine if you have PolyB is to take a look on the actual pipe.
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I’m just going to grab my flashlight and show you.. you may not be able to see it on
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the video feed, but over here we have, it’s actually stamped with some letters and numbers…
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PB and 2110.
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That’s a dead give away if you see PB on the pipes.
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PB 2110, probably the most common stamp that you will see on these type of pipes - so that’s
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what you want to check for.
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Usually the give away is the grey plastic is present because modern piping, such as
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PEX, they use different colours.
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They don’t use grey because they don’t want it to get mixed up with the poly‪butylene‬,
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they don’t want to look like a bad product.
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So if you see grey plastic, or you see PB, even if you have a different colour, if you’re
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buying a house from the 80’s or 90’s you’re going to want to check for that stamp and
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make sure that you’re not fooled by the colour.‬
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Mark: So are there any insurance problems with this product?
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David: Yeah, there were a number of insurance problems that have recently gotten a lot worse.
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I’ve seen, you know as a home inspector, in the last couple years, the insurance companies
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are getting more and more sort of resistant to insuring properties with it.
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For instance, if we were to buy this house and we went to get insurance, the first questions
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they’re going to ask us when they see the build date on the house is what type of pipes
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do you have?
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If I tell them I have original poly‪butylene‬, they ask what type of fittings we have, do
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you have the plastic fittings or the metal fittings.
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If we tell them we have the original plastic fittings, they may either quote us a really
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high water damage deductible or they may actually request that we re-pipe the house in extreme
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cases.
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So I’ve seen both happen.
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Sometimes they’ll grandfather the insurance from the existing owner but that’s a best
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case scenario.
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You could run into insurance problems so you should always check with your insurance company
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when you’re purchasing a house with this type of piping about how they’re going to
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approach it and if they want you to actually replace any pipes.‬
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Mark: So you mentioned there’s like splitting, pinhole leaks, fittings bursting…
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any other problems with this?
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I guess some other stuff can happen in areas where you’re not necessarily going to see
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it.
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David: That’s correct.
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Luckily this house is a rancher, it’s a one story on crawlspace so all the piping
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is very visible and that’s how they found the leak.
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But in some cases you’ve got it behind drywall, sometimes it’s in a concrete slab, so unfortunately
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if it is hidden, you want to be pretty careful with the stuff.
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Some of the other problems are, sometimes they burst when these plastic hangers, they
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used to use, a lot of these are broken by now especially in crawlspaces.
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So you see these plastic hangers and the thing is just hanging down and it puts a lot of
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strain on the connections.
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So we’re not going to want to have these hanging down too much, we’re going to want
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re-support them at very least.
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That’s going to help us out a lot.
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One thing you’re going to want to check is your hot water tank, you know poly‪butylene‬
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tends to burst within the first maybe twenty feet of the hot water tank.
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It’s very common for us to go in, take a look at a hot water tank and go there’s
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actually new piping just in that one area and that’s where the actual burst happened
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and the concept there was that the hot water accelerates the deterioration in the pipe.
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Mark: Thermal cycling just stresses it too much and the plastic can’t take it.
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David: Yeah the plastic becomes quite brittle and the theory here is that since the city’s
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water is chlorinated, the chlorine can actually break down the pipe structure, which when
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they developed it they didn’t take into account.
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They should of figured that out but unfortunately we found out the hard way.
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Mark: So how do we repair this?
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David: In most cases you’re going to want to re-pipe.
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This house, because we’re on the crawlspace, it should be pretty easy to re-pipe.
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We have this nice big crawlspace we can go through and replace it with a better product
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such as PEX.
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So PEX is our newer plastic, we’re going to see that in almost all new installations
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around here.
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PEX is basically a cross lined polyethylene plastic which has been in use in Europe for
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a long time, but we only recently brought it over here and it functions very well.
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It’s not subject to the bursting problems of the poly‪butylene‬ so we would probably
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want to go through and replace the PolyB.
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That’s going to be the best case scenario or our best option anyways.
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There are a couple other tricks you can do, you can lower your water pressure.
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We have seen that in a couple townhouse complexes where the entire townhouse complex is done
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with PolyB.
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What you can do is dial back your water pressure a little bit and that will actually reduce
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the impact on the connections and will reduce your chances of getting a problem.
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But aside from that a re-pipe is really your best option.
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If you’re having problems with it, in some cases you’re going to want to take a wait
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and see approach, which if you’ve got a more modern metal style you could hold out
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and see if you have any issues but the second it starts to leak you’re probably looking
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at a fairly good repair bill.‬
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Mark: Great, so with that good news and after we finish this I’m going downstairs to check…
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David: You have to check your pipes Mark, let me know what you have.
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Mark: I know that the place that we had in Richmond it was definitely the second one
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that you showed with the plastic and crimp fittings and we had issues.
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We didn’t re-pipe the whole place but we definitely did around the hot water tank.
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So been through this, know this game.
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David: Yeah absolutely and you have to be careful, you know a water leak can cost a
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lot more than a re-pipe.
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You know, a house like this, you could probably re-pipe it for around $3000 maybe even $4000
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for really high quality re-pipe.
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You want to weigh that against what a water leak would cost you and also the jump in your
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insurance premiums as well.
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A lot of home owners are choosing to take that route.
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Mark: Awesome David.
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So we’ve been talking with David Fairbairn of http://www.fairbairninspections.com - you
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can reach him at 604-395-2795.
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They are extremely busy so give them a call right away if you need something they can
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book you in the future.
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Thanks David
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David: Thanks Mark, have a great day.
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Mark: Thanks, bye.