Dhoerl
New Member
The gas company (natural gas) just replaced a 30 year old meter with a new one - the location is quite out of the way, so I took a good look at it after the installer left. I really don't remember the old setup.
What I see now is that on the outlet side of the meter - the low pressure side - is a 2" - 3" 1/2" "stub" connecting the meter to the inside plumbing. There is some sort of "yoke" that this connects into above the meter - a metal bar that has connections on either side that bridge pipes to the meter.
The low pressure (regulated) side of the meter has a reducer stuck in it (probably a 3/4" to 1/2", then there is a 2" or 3" piece of 1/2" pipe, which is threaded into the "yoke". The yoke has a reducer in it - guessing 1" to 1/2", but to be truthful it looks old. The other side of the "yoke" goes to a 1" (or larger) main line that runs across the basement (and has taps into it).
Obviously this 1/2" stub is going to reduce the potential amount of gas the meter can deliver. How can I compute what that amount is?
Should I call the gas company and have it replaced with a 1" stub?
David
What I see now is that on the outlet side of the meter - the low pressure side - is a 2" - 3" 1/2" "stub" connecting the meter to the inside plumbing. There is some sort of "yoke" that this connects into above the meter - a metal bar that has connections on either side that bridge pipes to the meter.
The low pressure (regulated) side of the meter has a reducer stuck in it (probably a 3/4" to 1/2", then there is a 2" or 3" piece of 1/2" pipe, which is threaded into the "yoke". The yoke has a reducer in it - guessing 1" to 1/2", but to be truthful it looks old. The other side of the "yoke" goes to a 1" (or larger) main line that runs across the basement (and has taps into it).
Obviously this 1/2" stub is going to reduce the potential amount of gas the meter can deliver. How can I compute what that amount is?
Should I call the gas company and have it replaced with a 1" stub?
David