DWV PVC pipe
- TheTrooper
- Specialist

- Posts: 165
- Joined: Sun Nov 04, 2007 4:15 am
I got some DWV pipe but it is also pressure rated up to 330 PSI. Now we all know DWV is bad but as long as it has a PSI rating its safe right? They kinda contradict each other I know this is a pretty nooby question, but i need to know.
i have pipe like that too. as long as its pressure rated then yes, its fine to use. the DWV just means that you can use it for DWV too, but i dont recommend taking it to 330 psi no matter what kind of pvc it is. i would say no higher than 150 psi, but thats just me.
"physics, gravity, and law enforcement are the only things that prevent me from operating at my full potential" - not sure, but i like the quote
you know you are not an engineer if you have to remind yourself "left loosy righty tighty"
you know you are not an engineer if you have to remind yourself "left loosy righty tighty"
- TheTrooper
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- Posts: 165
- Joined: Sun Nov 04, 2007 4:15 am
Thank you, i just needed a good answer. Yea i see what you mean cause i have never taken it higher than 120, My valve is a ball valve (yes they suck) and its max is 150
- jimmy101
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If you look closely at the labelling on the pipe (if it is all there) it probably says both NSF-pw and NSF-dwv.
dwv is a lower spec than pw, but since they are both Sch40 they have the same critical dimension. So, if a pipe (or fitting) will work for pw it'll also work for dwv. It is the converse that is not necisarily true.
dwv is a lower spec than pw, but since they are both Sch40 they have the same critical dimension. So, if a pipe (or fitting) will work for pw it'll also work for dwv. It is the converse that is not necisarily true.

DWV isn't necessarily bad, it just means that the NSF rates it as Drain Waste Vent. DWV copper is often rated for hundreds of psi.
Any pipe that displays a pressure rating should be safe for use up to that pressure. In practice, however, plastic pipe should not be used up to its rating due to its unfortunate tendency to have microscopic defects and to degrade over time.
Any pipe that displays a pressure rating should be safe for use up to that pressure. In practice, however, plastic pipe should not be used up to its rating due to its unfortunate tendency to have microscopic defects and to degrade over time.
Spudfiles' resident expert on all things that sail through the air at improbable speeds, trailing an incandescent wake of ionized air, dissociated polymers and metal oxides.
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