Harvey's PVC Cement

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plumb.bob.down

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I know both CPVC and PVC are Poly-vinyl Chloride.

On the Harvey's PVC Cement can, it doesn't say that it's not permissible for CPVC.

Please tell me it will hold?

I cleaned every joint in the CPVC water supply before gluing it.

Thanks
 

Gary Swart

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The thing you must understand is that plastic pipes such as ABS, PVC, and CPVC are made from different chemicals and their joints are not actually glued. The so-called glue is actually a solvent that dissolves the outer surfaces of the pipes and fittings briefly so that when the pieces are slide together the two surfaces actual flow together. It forms a chemical weld. Each of the types of pipe require different solvents. It probably seems that the joints you made are OK, but if the solvent you used was not the solvent for the kind of pipe you used, the joints will fail.
 

BAPlumber

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this will probably start an arguement here but, if the can does not say it can be used on cpvc, I wouldn't use it. CPVC (clorinated poly vinyl cloride) is differant from PVC.
 

Mikey

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There are some multipurpose cements that explicitly say they will work on PVC, CPVC, and maybe even ABS. Every professional plumber I've talked to says avoid using these if at all possible -- stick with the PVC cement for PVC, CPVC cement for CPVC, etc.
 

hj

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cement

The problem is that almost any cement will hold pipes together for a while just because it had filled the void and is pressing against the pipe and fitting. The thing you do not know is whether the pipe and fitting are actually bonded together or just being held by friction. If not bonded, then any subsequent movement will disturb the joint and it will either start leaking or come apart, depending on how much movement it can develop.
 

Mikey

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Even the primer alone will hold a CPVC joint up to about 50psi, based on one of my pressure-tests here. At about 51psi, all hell breaks loose :eek:.
 
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