You have it wrong. Freezing water does expand, and if there's no room for expansion the container will crack open or burst. Just compare the level of water in an ice tray before and after freezing. Water/ice is not compressible, but air is compressible. It's freezing water that does the damage.We all hear lots of things...
Before you try to improve upon prior success, remember that the frozen water isn’t what bursts lines. It’s the air pressure in the void space of a closed line which is compressed by freezing water. In other words, a little bit of residual water in an otherwise open line won’t burst. Save the antifreeze .
The temperature ratings on AF are typically for the "burst point" the temperature at which the slush turns solid and begins to expand.The liquid in an antifreeze will become slushy and will require much lower temperatures than rated to freeze sufficiently solidly to cause freeze damage.
Interesting, - I've never seen that to be the case, but if so, I stand corrected. Direct experience has shown me that not to be the case. Do you have reference material to that? I would be very interested in reading it. Most especially as I've been counting on this to be the case.! Hahahaha...The temperature ratings on AF are typically for the "burst point" the temperature at which the slush turns solid and begins to expand.
In the fine print on this description.Interesting, - I've never seen that to be the case, but if so, I stand corrected. Direct experience has shown me that not to be the case. Do you have reference material to that? I would be very interested in reading it. Most especially as I've been counting on this to be the case.! Hahahaha...
dj
Also, they’re generally the burst point for copper plumbing. In the fine print you’ll find, for example, that -50 antifreeze is only recommended in plastic plumbing for temperatures down to -10.The temperature ratings on AF are typically for the "burst point" the temperature at which the slush turns solid and begins to expand.
Right - see below - but as I understand it, when you use a hygrometer to measure it gives you the freeze protection range, not the burst protection.In the fine print on this description.
Winter Tech -50ºF Marine & RV Water System Antifreeze
Starbrite quality care products since 1973 for: Automotive, Marine, Aviation, Motorcycle, Powersports, Outdoor Power Equipment, ATV, Snowmobile, Home Care, Outdoor Furniture, Farm Implement.www.starbrite.com
Are you sure about that? That doesn't make sense to me.Air is compressible, water is not. Water expands when it freezes. I would WANT air in there that can compress to make room for freezing water. Help me understand how what you said is accurate.remember that the frozen water isn’t what bursts lines. It’s the air pressure in the void space of a closed line which is compressed by freezing water.
Woohoo! found a 3-way valve that should be perfect for my bypass setup. With this I'll just need one each valve on the in and out nipples and a bypass hose connecting the two. Fewer connections and only 2 valves to turn. I'm doing this in PEX. I have the crimp toolkitThat's quite the Rube Goldberg. You may have to trace the tubing and diagram it to get the whole picture.
One of my off season projects is to redo the lines to my heater so I can bypass it with a flick of some valves instead of disconnecting and reconnecting.