turns? I'd like 3/4' PEX, but as a fallback, could I use 1/2' and still get any kind of pressure / flow out of it after 200'?ġ last question - I was thinking of pulling from the house - keep the pex out of sunlight. being that I haven't worked with pex, is it flexible enough to get around these 4 90 deg. a 90 tuns towars the house and then a right and left 90 to get around existing things and into the house. DWV sched 40 / 80 connectors that are sharper turns).ġ 90 is at the shed - there's a vertical pipe into the ground, and it hits the 90 at the bottom. There's a total of 4 90 degree turns in the run (being conduit, the curves ARE wide (vs.
So, with this 200' run, I want to get PEX in there to get the water out to the shed. I forget that number but thought it was interesting as a way to keep you from making things hard on yourself. I think I remember about electrical code years ago - a conduit run could only have a maximum number of degrees from all the turns before an access panel was needed. I want to be able to have a faucet for a garden hose out there so I don't have to drag a long hose from the house when I need to water in that part of the yard. I have a 200' run of 2' grey eletrical conduit buried between my house and a shed. Am I in for trouble? I never worked with PEX before and someone locally thought this wasn't going to work: