[Shop-talk] CSST gas fittings
Mark Miller
markmiller at threeboysfarm.com
Fri Feb 23 23:35:05 MST 2018
Sorry, I was unclear. I bought some that had a heavy metal ring, placed
on the first corrugation, that held the nut on. With that design the
cut end of the tube butted against a deformable gasket on the 'fixed'
end of the fitting. Instruction then said to torque the nut down fairly
hard (60 ft-pounds?). The second set sound like the one you discussed:
split ring to hold the nut on, 5 corrugations back. Metal ring next,
then the o ring. The cut end of the pipe was not the sealing surface:
it is the o ring against the metal ring and the end of the fixed fitting
half. I am guessing that design replaced the first one.
Regards,
Mark Miller
markmiller at threeboysfarm.com
On 2/23/2018 5:27 AM, Arvid wrote:
> Having recently put in 5 or 6 of these from Menards, both 1/2 and 3/4
> inch, and if my memory is any good, the incantation was:
>
> Cut end as clean as possible. I did use a file on several of them to
> smooth out the jags and sharp edge that seemed inevitable when I cut
> it with a pipe cutter.
>
> Strip yellow jacket to reveal 5 indentations.
>
> Put nut on tubing.
>
> Put metal ring on tubing.
>
> Put o-ring on tubing.
>
> Make sure gasket was still in the receiving side of the fitting.
>
> Put together and tighten nut no more than 1/2 turn.
>
> None of them leaked.
>
> There was the o-ring plus a gasket that was in the base of the
> receiving side of the fitting to seal it. The gasket would be where
> the cut end of the tubing would butt up against to make a seal. Plus
> the o-ring to seal around the tubing.
>
> Your description of the first one seems to only have the gasket on the
> receiving side and your description of the second one suggests it only
> had the o-ring. All of mine had both, which seems to make sense.
>
> Arvid
>
>
> On 2/22/2018 10:55 PM, Mark Miller wrote:
>> So I just put in some flexible gas piping with CSST fittings. One
>> leaked. I took it apart and replaced the fitting and all is OK but:
>> the new fitting is a very different design from the first. First
>> sealed the end of the tube to a surface on the connector, whole thing
>> held together by pressure against a ring you crimp into the
>> corrugations of the tube. The replacement uses an o ring to seal it
>> all, so to the sides of the tube. Which is newer? Which is
>> preferred? Or should I avoid this kind of plumbing altogether?
>> (personally I think the o ring will give a better seal and isn't
>> dependent on cutting the tube cleanly).
>>
>>
>> Thanks, o wisdom of the list!
>>
>
>
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