The gas line is already run under the floor - it supplies the furnace, the water heater, and the dryer. It's black pipe and seems to be in good shape. There's a "T" where a gas stove was installed prior to 1970, and there's a valve just past the furnace branch and another just past the "T". I have complete access because the basement ceiling isn't finished. My plan is to connect where the old stove was, bring the pipe the six or so inches up into the kitchen, then attach the new valve and supply line. Here are my challenges and concerns:
The old connection where I plan to tie in is on one arm of a 1" "T". The old stove connection is angled about 11° off perpendicular, so I have two choices: I can use a couple of elbows and nipples to correct the angle and move it closer to the upstairs wall (just an inch or two) OR I can see if I can turn the pipe beneath enough to straighten the connection. There's enough there that I could get a big wrench around it and turn the "T" back to perpendicular.
It's 50+ year old pipe and connections. I'm nervous enough about messing with the cap, let alone the whole pipe: I'm afraid of snapping any of the pieces, or loosening a connection up stream.
I've done just about everything else in this house in the 50 years I've lived here. Plumbing, electrical, drywall, framing, siding. This is my first time dealing with black pipe.
Advice? Reassurance? Dire warnings?
The old connection where I plan to tie in is on one arm of a 1" "T". The old stove connection is angled about 11° off perpendicular, so I have two choices: I can use a couple of elbows and nipples to correct the angle and move it closer to the upstairs wall (just an inch or two) OR I can see if I can turn the pipe beneath enough to straighten the connection. There's enough there that I could get a big wrench around it and turn the "T" back to perpendicular.
It's 50+ year old pipe and connections. I'm nervous enough about messing with the cap, let alone the whole pipe: I'm afraid of snapping any of the pieces, or loosening a connection up stream.
I've done just about everything else in this house in the 50 years I've lived here. Plumbing, electrical, drywall, framing, siding. This is my first time dealing with black pipe.
Advice? Reassurance? Dire warnings?
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