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PLUMBING TOPICS OIL & GAS PIPING GAS PIPING, VALVES, CONTROLS Gas BTUH & Cubic Feet Gas Flame & Noise Defects Gas Leak Detection Gas Lighting Pipes & Fixtures Gas Meters Gas Piping Defects Gas Appliance Regulator Defects Gas Shutoff Valves LP Gas Tanks LP & Natural Gas Safety Hazards Types of Fuel Gas Source HEATING SYSTEMS OIL TANKS SEPTIC TEST / REPAIR TANK TYPES: WATER, OIL, EXPANSION, ALL WATER PUMPS & TANKS & WELLS WATER SUPPLY & DRAIN PIPING WELLS CISTERNS & SPRINGS More Information InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map Air Conditioning InspectAPedia Bookstore Electrical Environment Exteriors Heating Home Inspection Insulate Ventilate Interiors Mold Inspect/Test Roofing Plumbing Water Septic Structure Accuracy & Bias Pledge Contact Us |
This document provides free sample draft home inspection report language for reporting defects in oil and gas piping at residential properties. Here we provide descriptions and photographs of unsafe gas piping, indications of unsafe or improperly operating gas appliances, gas meters, and other gas installation defects are provided. General safety warning: improper installation and even improper inspection and testing methods involving natural or "LP" gas can involve dangerous conditions and risk fire or explosion. If you smell gas you should leave the building immediately and should do so without doing anything that could create a spark such as operating a light switch or telephone. From a safe location, call your gas company's emergency line and/or your fire department. The text provided here is a working draft and may be incomplete or inaccurate. Contact us to suggest text changes and additions and, if you wish, to receive online listing and credit for that contribution. Also see How to Report Defects in Oil Piping. NOTICE: while example report language is provided here, reproduction of this or any of our web pages or their contents at other websites or in printed documents for sale is prohibited. © Copyright 2008 Daniel Friedman, All Rights Reserved. Information Accuracy & Un-Biased Reporting are Assured for this website - see pledge link at below-left. How to Identify & Report LP Gas or Natural Gas Fuel Piping DefectsLP Gas Regulator Installation Requirements
LP Gas Regulator Inspection ProcedureThe LP Gas regulator(s) should be inspected each time that the building receives an LP gas delivery.
LP Gas Piping Defect list and sample home inspection report languageSafety warnings about gas piping: Check condition of flexible gas line connections: Caution: we do not pull out appliances to look at gas line connections, but you should do so, checking condition of flexible connections for leaks and assuring that a shutoff valve is installed. Watch for leaks in those flex-connector lines between gas line and the appliance as they are thin wall and often corrode and leak. Gas leaks are dangerous. Safety warning. Flexible soft copper piping has been used to supply municipal (natural) gas to the
Safety warning: Flexible ridged thin wall copper tubing has been used to supply gas to the Technical Violation: Flexible copper LP gas line may not be routed through walls or similar locations where it may be damaged or punctured. For these sections of routing threaded iron pipe is required. This is an usually inexpensive item to correct. You can discuss this point further with your gas supplier and your plumber. All gas or oil piping must comply with local codes and ordinances or with the national fuel gas codes. Copper and brass tubing (except tin lined copper) shall not be used if the gas contains more than an average of .3 grains of hydrogen sulfide per 100 standard cubic feet of gas. National Fuel Gas Code, 1988 articles 2.6.2, 2.6.3, & 3.4.2 "Piping in Partitions". Also NFPA 58 Code. See ANSI Z223.1-NFPA 54.
*** Safety Recommendation: support the loose gas lines: gas lines> additional support is needed to secure the building appliance gas supply line at
Gas Piping Maintenance TipsMAINTENANCE TIP: Openings where the gas supply pipe enters the building should be caulked to reduce possible water or insect/rodent pest entry. Safety Recommendation: the gas supply line at... is not installed according to the manufacturer's recommendations. Proper iron pipe plumbing with sediment trap, also called a "drip leg" (typically at least 3" long off of a "tee" at same height as the gas control) should be installed. This is an inexpensive plumbing correction and it should corrected soon to avoid moisture damage to the gas controls. (Note that depending on the quality of the gas being delivered in some municipalities, the installation of a drip leg or dirt leg may not be required by local officials. *** Safety: gas line loose: At ... better support is needed for the gas piping. Loose piping risks dangerous gas leaks. ... We did not observe/smell a leak at this location when we inspected. This item should be handled as soon as possible. *** Safety:We recommend that unused gas equipment be removed and that you have the unused section of gas line properly sealed by a qualified plumber or by your gas supplier. Leaky old appliances or gas lines are dangerous. Recommendations for use of two-stage gas regulationMany residential LP gas installations will be found with a single gas pressure regulator at the storage tank. A "two stage" LP gas regulation system uses two gas pressure regulators. Gas flows out of the LP Gas storage tank first through a "high pressure" regulation stage (usually installed right at the LP gas tank) and then through a second "low pressure" regulator as a second stage (usually installed close to the point of LP gas entry into the building). Two stage LP gas regulation is required for certain installations but is less often found installed at single family residential properties. Experts recommend this "two-stage" regulation of LP gas installations, particularly where large LP tanks are installed above or below ground for several reasons:
[See LP or Natural Gas Pressures for a table showing the range of variation in LP gas pressure in the tank at various temperatures.] Testing for LP Gas System LeaksHere we outline some common procedures used to test gas piping and fittings for leaks. These procedures should work equally well for both LP gas (propane or bottled gas) systems and for natural gas (piped-in gas from a gas utility company) systems. [NOTE: Except that LP gas and natural gas operate at different pressures and thus will have different test pressure specifications] Readers who are interested in gas leak detection equipment should review our article and gas testing warnings at Recommendations for gas measurement instruments & gas detector tubes for indoor gas level tests which includes our description of use of the TIF8800 and similar gas detectors. Pressure testing a gas piping system for evidence of gas leaksThese two methods are generally used to test a gas piping distribution system to see if leaks are present.
Methods used to find and identify points of gas leaks in a gas piping distribution system or at a gas appliance
Identifying Sources of Leaks at Brass Flare Fittings on LP Gas Piping Systems
Here are two brass flare fittings. One of them had a gouge that gave us a gas leak that was a bit tough to find until we disassembled and inspected the leaky joint. If tightening flared copper tubing connections does not easily correct a leak at that joint, do not just over-tighten the joint (you may break the flare and cause a still larger leak), and do not rely on pipe sealant inside of flared copper tubing fittings. Open and inspect the joint, and replace the flare fittings or make a new copper tubing flared end if necessary. General Safety Warnings for LP or "bottled" or "propane" Gas Installations & InspectionsImmediate LP or natural gas safety hazards: if there is evidence of an LP or natural gas leak at a building, gas odors, for example, you should:
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GAS PIPING, VALVES, CONTROLS Gas BTUH & Cubic Feet Gas Flame & Noise Defects Gas Leak Detection Gas Lighting Pipes & Fixtures Gas Meters Gas Piping Defects Gas Appliance Regulator Defects Gas Shutoff Valves LP Gas Tanks LP & Natural Gas Safety Hazards Types of Fuel Gas Source More Information InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map Air Conditioning InspectAPedia Bookstore Electrical Environment Exteriors Heating Home Inspection Insulate Ventilate Interiors Mold Inspect/Test Roofing Plumbing Water Septic Structure Accuracy & Bias Pledge Contact Us |
More Information on Building Diagnostic Inspections and RepairsPlumbing Systems, Water Supply, Wells, Piping, Drain Piping, Septic Systems Information Articles
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12/15/2007 - www.inspect-ny.com/plumbing/gasfaults4.htm - © 2008 Copyright Daniel Friedman All Rights Reserved