rustic_philosopher
Well-Known Member
Hi,
I live in NE Texas, had a house built out in the country a few years ago and I always have issues with freezing pipes in the winter. My plumbing is PEX and the main runs are in the attic. The PEX is run over the top of the joists and under insulation but there is enough insulation between the drywall and the pipes so that when we have several days below freezing, the pipe fittings will freeze and sometimes leak.
I put a wireless thermometer as a test at 2.5 off the drywall during our last cold spell and was able to confirm that at 2.5 inches off the drywall (but still under the insulation of course) the temp stayed around 50 degrees despite the attic being 10 degrees. So my plan is to re-run the pex in the attic through the joists so I can keep the pex close enough to the drywall to benefit from the residual heat from the drywall to prevent freezing fittings.
So, questions:
I live in NE Texas, had a house built out in the country a few years ago and I always have issues with freezing pipes in the winter. My plumbing is PEX and the main runs are in the attic. The PEX is run over the top of the joists and under insulation but there is enough insulation between the drywall and the pipes so that when we have several days below freezing, the pipe fittings will freeze and sometimes leak.
I put a wireless thermometer as a test at 2.5 off the drywall during our last cold spell and was able to confirm that at 2.5 inches off the drywall (but still under the insulation of course) the temp stayed around 50 degrees despite the attic being 10 degrees. So my plan is to re-run the pex in the attic through the joists so I can keep the pex close enough to the drywall to benefit from the residual heat from the drywall to prevent freezing fittings.
So, questions:
- Do anyone see a problem with the plan?
- Are there holed brackets that I can use to install on the joists to reinforce the location where I drill a hole for the pex to pass?