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Home > Archive > Home Repair forum > July 2005 > Turning the gas back on
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Turning the gas back on
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| genetichealth@hotmail.com 2005-07-26, 8:21 pm |
| I want to hook up a gas dryer to a newly installed gas line a plumber
put in for me. The line doesn't have a shut-off valve, so I was going
to shut the gas off at the main. But the gas company says that if I
turn it off, I have to have them come out and turn the gas back on
(which could take at least a week to schedule).
It seems like it is pretty easy to turn off and back on...one twist of
the valve. Is there really any danger from me just turning it back on
myself?
Thanks!!
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<genetichealth@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1122418757.297340.46440@g49g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
>I want to hook up a gas dryer to a newly installed gas line a plumber
> put in for me. The line doesn't have a shut-off valve, so I was going
> to shut the gas off at the main. But the gas company says that if I
> turn it off, I have to have them come out and turn the gas back on
> (which could take at least a week to schedule).
>
> It seems like it is pretty easy to turn off and back on...one twist of
> the valve. Is there really any danger from me just turning it back on
> myself?
>
> Thanks!!
>
No none at all if your confident in your work! Mine has a valve at the meter
that can be locked closed just turn that 90 degrees and your pressure is
off. Do your work add a shut off valve check all your fittings with Snoop or
some other similar bubbling leak detector after you turn the gas back on and
if everything is good your good to go! YMMV.
Rich
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| Joseph Meehan 2005-07-26, 9:21 pm |
| genetichealth@hotmail.com wrote:
>I want to hook up a gas dryer to a newly installed gas line a plumber
> put in for me. The line doesn't have a shut-off valve, so I was going
> to shut the gas off at the main. But the gas company says that if I
> turn it off, I have to have them come out and turn the gas back on
> (which could take at least a week to schedule).
>
> It seems like it is pretty easy to turn off and back on...one twist of
> the valve. Is there really any danger from me just turning it back on
> myself?
>
> Thanks!!
They want to make sure of your work and to make sure all the pilot
lights are back up and working.
--
Joseph Meehan
Dia duit
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| Carolina Breeze HVAC 2005-07-26, 9:21 pm |
|
<genetichealth@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1122418757.297340.46440@g49g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
>I want to hook up a gas dryer to a newly installed gas line a plumber
> put in for me. The line doesn't have a shut-off valve, so I was going
> to shut the gas off at the main. But the gas company says that if I
> turn it off, I have to have them come out and turn the gas back on
> (which could take at least a week to schedule).
>
> It seems like it is pretty easy to turn off and back on...one twist of
> the valve. Is there really any danger from me just turning it back on
> myself?
>
> Thanks!!
>
Why didnt your plumber follow IBC and put a shut off valve at the
termination of the gas line?
As a licenced gas pipe fitter, this kinda shit scares me...that there are
actually people getting paid for halfassed work.
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| Edwin Pawlowski 2005-07-26, 10:21 pm |
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<genetichealth@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1122418757.297340.46440@g49g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
>I want to hook up a gas dryer to a newly installed gas line a plumber
> put in for me. The line doesn't have a shut-off valve, so I was going
> to shut the gas off at the main.
Big error on the part of the plumber. There MUST be a shutoff valve before
the dryer. He should have installed one before the union that connects to
the dryer. This guy was an idiot if he did not put a valve in the line.
> It seems like it is pretty easy to turn off and back on...one twist of
> the valve. Is there really any danger from me just turning it back on
> myself?
Not really, but they get fussy about things like that. You must re-light
any pilot lights and you may have air in the lines, especially where the new
work it. Do not even think about finishing the job the plumber did half
assed with no valve. Sequence is valve, nipple, union, rest of the piping.
OTOH, do you know what a gas valve looks like? It is not a knob on top like
a water valve. How did he terminate the line? Should be plugged or capped.
How did he turn the gas back on when he finished?
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| genetichealth@hotmail.com 2005-07-26, 11:21 pm |
| Thanks for all your responses. Yes, we think the plumber is an idiot
too; which is why we are trying to finish the work ourselves. It
actually all seems fine (except for the lack of valves), but well, he
was just difficult to work with.
Anyway, I looked up online how to turn the gas off and on (and they had
pictures of the valves). The line is capped, and we have a reducer to
attach it to the dryer (and teflon tape for the grooves). We're pretty
sure he turned the gas off at the meter and then turned it back on.
(This was about a month ago, and there have been no problems, so it
seems fine.)
Is there some sort of kit we can buy to add a valve to the currently
capped line before we attach it to the dryer?
Thanks again.
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| CL (dnoyeB) Gilbert 2005-07-27, 1:21 am |
| genetichealth@hotmail.com wrote:
> Thanks for all your responses. Yes, we think the plumber is an idiot
> too; which is why we are trying to finish the work ourselves. It
> actually all seems fine (except for the lack of valves), but well, he
> was just difficult to work with.
>
> Anyway, I looked up online how to turn the gas off and on (and they had
> pictures of the valves). The line is capped, and we have a reducer to
> attach it to the dryer (and teflon tape for the grooves). We're pretty
> sure he turned the gas off at the meter and then turned it back on.
> (This was about a month ago, and there have been no problems, so it
> seems fine.)
>
> Is there some sort of kit we can buy to add a valve to the currently
> capped line before we attach it to the dryer?
>
> Thanks again.
>
no 'kit' but you can buy a valve at the hardware store. I like to use
the local mom n pop hardware store where they can tell you a thing or
too about what you just bought and how not to kill yourself. Usually
they know one or two people who have almost killed themselves so the
advice is usually solid. Pay a bit more, but its certainly worth it.
--
Respectfully,
CL Gilbert
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| George E. Cawthon 2005-07-27, 2:21 am |
| genetichealth@hotmail.com wrote:
> Thanks for all your responses. Yes, we think the plumber is an idiot
> too; which is why we are trying to finish the work ourselves. It
> actually all seems fine (except for the lack of valves), but well, he
> was just difficult to work with.
>
> Anyway, I looked up online how to turn the gas off and on (and they had
> pictures of the valves). The line is capped, and we have a reducer to
> attach it to the dryer (and teflon tape for the grooves). We're pretty
> sure he turned the gas off at the meter and then turned it back on.
> (This was about a month ago, and there have been no problems, so it
> seems fine.)
>
> Is there some sort of kit we can buy to add a valve to the currently
> capped line before we attach it to the dryer?
>
> Thanks again.
>
You don't need a kit. You need a gas ball valve
(looks just like a water ball valve) and then you
need a line from the valve to the appliance. Just
go to a plumbing supply store and tell them what
you want to do, they will tell you what you need.
All you need to know is the size of the capped
pipe. Probably suggest a little higher quality
than you need but well worth avoiding plumber costs.
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| meirman 2005-07-27, 2:21 am |
| In alt.home.repair on 26 Jul 2005 15:59:17 -0700
genetichealth@hotmail.com posted:
>I want to hook up a gas dryer to a newly installed gas line a plumber
>put in for me. The line doesn't have a shut-off valve, so I was going
>to shut the gas off at the main. But the gas company says that if I
>turn it off, I have to have them come out and turn the gas back on
>(which could take at least a week to schedule).
I'm not going to comment on gas, but in Baltimore County, or Maryland,
when they disconnect your electricity for non-payment, they won't turn
it on again unless someone is home**. On the other hand, when it is
disconnected for snow, which can last days, they reconnnect everyone
at once whether they are home or not.
**They do come within probably 2 to 4 hours, not a week, but sometimes
someone wants to go to work instead of back home.
>It seems like it is pretty easy to turn off and back on...one twist of
>the valve. Is there really any danger from me just turning it back on
>myself?
>
>Thanks!!
Meirman
--
If emailing, please let me know whether
or not you are posting the same letter.
Change domain to erols.com, if necessary.
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| ~^Johnny^~ 2005-07-27, 5:21 am |
| -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
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On Wed, 27 Jul 2005 19:46:34 -0400, "Carolina Breeze HVAC"
<steve@carolinabreezehvac.com> wrote:
>Why didnt your plumber follow IBC and put a shut off valve at the
>termination of the gas line?
To save a nickel.
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=tuBn
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--
-john
wide-open at throttle dot info
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| Vic Dura 2005-07-27, 8:21 am |
| On 26 Jul 2005 15:59:17 -0700, in alt.home.repair RE: Turning the gas
back on genetichealth@hotmail.com wrote:
>I want to hook up a gas dryer to a newly installed gas line a plumber
>put in for me. The line doesn't have a shut-off valve, so I was going
>to shut the gas off at the main. But the gas company says that if I
>turn it off, I have to have them come out and turn the gas back on
>(which could take at least a week to schedule).
The plumber had to shut the gas to install the new gas line. Did the
gas company come out then to turn it back on?
--
To reply to me directly, remove the CLUTTER from my email address.
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| genetichealth@hotmail.com 2005-07-27, 9:21 pm |
| No, I'm sure the plumber turned the gas back on himself. Since I'm not
a plumber I just wanted to make sure it wasn't more dangerous than it
seems (especially with the gas company being so adamant about doing it
themselves.).
Thanks for all your responses!!
| |
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| One reason the gas company likes to turn gas back on is that if you turn
back on too quickly there is a chance that could rupture the rubber diafram
in the regulator. Be sure to always turn on slowly.
"~^Johnny^~" <nospam@gyrogearloose.com> wrote in message
news:769ee1tivomdsfuh538a74tsp9dure70sg@4ax.com...
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> Hash: SHA1
>
> On Wed, 27 Jul 2005 19:46:34 -0400, "Carolina Breeze HVAC"
> <steve@carolinabreezehvac.com> wrote:
>
>
> To save a nickel.
>
>
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
> Version: PGP 7.1
>
> iQA/AwUBQuck1AIk7T39FC4ZEQKTZQCguxG2If1sek+GaDYTW1v/lk9ffcwAnAkK
> LU7xvS7+XaKMxigS6TwaBmQ2
> =tuBn
> -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
>
> --
> -john
> wide-open at throttle dot info
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| Carolina Breeze HVAC 2005-07-30, 8:21 am |
|
"MC" <mwclarke1@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:ZveGe.14121$Ie1.9233@bignews1.bellsouth.net...
> One reason the gas company likes to turn gas back on is that if you turn
> back on too quickly there is a chance that could rupture the rubber
> diafram
> in the regulator. Be sure to always turn on slowly.
Actually, no.
Not unless they have a commercial system running more than 5lbs, and even
then, the regulators are built to handle more than that.
The reason the gas companies like to be there is to make sure that the new
install is safe. If you sold a product that most people on average didnt
understand but the BOOM factor, and you had unlicenced persons working with
it, would you not want to make sure it was safe?
One NG explosion in a neighborhood really hurts profits as everyone changes
over to electric.
>
>
> "~^Johnny^~" <nospam@gyrogearloose.com> wrote in message
> news:769ee1tivomdsfuh538a74tsp9dure70sg@4ax.com...
>
>
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