• Welcome to The Building Code Forum

    Your premier resource for building code knowledge.

    This forum remains free to the public thanks to the generous support of our Sawhorse Members and Corporate Sponsors. Their contributions help keep this community thriving and accessible.

    Want enhanced access to expert discussions and exclusive features? Learn more about the benefits here.

    Ready to upgrade? Log in and upgrade now.

Can I just bend my hot water PEX line out of the wall?

PatrickGSR94

Member
Joined
Apr 19, 2016
Messages
64
Location
Mississippi
My hot water line from the water heater was leaking the other day. After cutting out wet drywall, I'm thinking that thermal movement in the PEX stub-out pipe (SS braided line from water heater to PEX stub-out) rubbed against the drywall and caused a pinhole leak to develop. The stub-out had a 90-degree fitting inside the wall, then runs down below slab before heading out to fixtures. I cut the riser pipe below the fitting, removed both the fitting and the sub-out, and then connected my SS braised line directly to that riser. So from the water heater, the SS hose goes up and curves over and back down, and connects to the PEX pipe that is now slightly bent out from the wall cavity.

It works fine, no leaks. And I like that a fitting and 2 crimp bands have been eliminated from inside the wall. And of course, I want that SS line to PEX connection (yes it's SharkBite, and yes it works just fine) to remain outside the finished wall. So the question is, can I put up new drywall and just finish around the PEX pipe that's bending out of the wall? Obviously it won't look the best, but it's a garage and I don't really care if the pipe isn't actually perpendicular coming out of the wall. I just want it to remain leak-free. Any code issues doing this?
 
No code issues with what you have proposed, unless you bend the pipe too tight, which doesn't sound like you are.
Obviously it won't look the best, but it's a garage and I don't really care if the pipe isn't actually perpendicular coming out of the wall.
I judge you from my lofty perch behind my keyboard ;)
 
No code issues with what you have proposed, unless you bend the pipe too tight, which doesn't sound like you are.

I judge you from my lofty perch behind my keyboard ;)

yeah I know, if my garage were nicer I would do something else, but it's barely big enough for my needs, and we're hoping to get out of this place in the near future, so I'm not as concerned about it looking super nice.

The PEX pipe had a clamp on it just below the 90-degree elbow, and then another one about 8-12 inches down. I removed the top clamp and cut the pipe a few inches lower, in order for it to make a slight bend outside the plane of the original wall surface. So there's still a clamp about 8 inches below the current pipe connection.
 
Back
Top