When building science consultant Steve Easley began work on his whole-house remodel in Scottsdale, Ariz., plumbing was top of mind. He had experienced a plumbing failure at a previous home and never wanted that scenario to happen again
“What’s happened is that the way we use water has changed,” he explains. “Not only are cities larger, with a lot more piping, but also because of low-flow faucets and fixtures in the home: Water tends to sit longer in pipes between uses.”
That’s a problem, he says, because many municipalities use chlorination to keep bacteria out of drinking water. Unless the pipe is made of resistant materials, the chlorine begins to eat away at the lining and joints in the plumbing.
“It’s no accident that there have been almost two dozen class-action lawsuits related to premature plumbing failures in recent years,” Easley says. “Which is why for the ReVISION House Scottsdale (his remodel project), we decided to go with CPVC piping. Because it’s manufactured using chlorine, it’s completely impervious to chlorine exposure during use.
Easley chose the brand, he says, because the company has a long history and because the fittings are readily available; fit together without special tools, and cause no restriction in water flow.
He adds that the plastics used in the construction of these pipes also resist virtually any household chemical they’re likely to encounter, reducing the chance of other unwanted toxins leaching into the home water supply.
Editor's Note: Since publication of this video and blog, we've had some comments from readers critical of Steve's endorsement of CPVC materials, particularly over metals. Both plastics and metals, of course, produce fairly high levels of CO2 pollution in their manufacture, so neither can claim a climate neutral pedigree. Metal such as copper is generally more readily recyclable than PVC, but also exacts a large ecological toll in the extraction and refining phases. It's perhaps part of a future analysis to make a life-cycle comparison of each type of product.
This video, however, focuses on a specific aspect of CPVC plumbing: its performance under some new circumstances: longer periods when chlorine in water sits dormant in pipes due to low-flow fixtures, and housing built at longer distance from treatment facilities, leading to the need for higher levels of chemical pretreatment of potable water.
Here are a few more comments from Steve Easley: