Plumbing – Inserting a connecting threaded water plastic pipe between two fixed ends

plumbingwater

Newbie to plumbing here so please excuse the question if it does not make sense!

This morning I removed a length of threaded plastic water pipe that was connected to an elbow at one end and to a "T" connector at the other. The reason was that the "T" end (coming directly from the roof tank) was leaking and I decided to remove the pipe to check for cracks etc, (fortunately none were found). I removed the pipe by sawing it right through the middle which made it easy to unscrew the two cut ends. The situation after removal was as per photo below:

Existing setup

To be clear all fittings had been installed by the plumber about 20 years ago, however I imagine that at the time of installation he would have added a component at a time, and thus the problem I encountered would not have arisen.

The question (and my problem) is how do people replace such pipes given that the two "ends" are now fixed in place and cannot turn? Surely tightening the pipe at the "elbow" end would mean loosening it at the other "T" end? And if you try inserting half the thread at each end, then surely it is unlikely you would get a very tight seal at either?

For the work in hand I got around this problem by using "Acorn" fittings with adaptors (as shown below) – albeit it was a very tight squeeze – but I am dying to know how a plumber would have done it using the "old" threaded pipe. If anyone can explain it would be appreciated!

Using Acorn fittings

Best Answer

You use a fitting called a union.

It allows you to thread a nipple into the elbow, and a nipple into the tee. Then you use the union to connect the two nipples.

pipe union photo courtesy of Wikipedia

They are available in many sizes and materials.