Lightly countersink the two screw holes. Fill with JB Weld. Cover with Gorrila tape. Let sit for 24 hours. Start using upstairs bath and monitor for leaks. If no leaks after three days, patch wall.I did that a year ago, my plumber told me to use JB Weld two part syringe. Worked perfectly…
I would add, clean the pipe with something good to degrease it. I used lacquer thinner…Lightly countersink the two screw holes. Fill with JB Weld. Cover with Gorrila tape. Let sit for 24 hours. Start using upstairs bath and monitor for leaks. If no leaks after three days, patch wall.
The problem with that is those might rust through and the hole comes back (slightly smaller) Personally I really like the mention of epoxy covered with more PVC and a clamp. Or a small square of packing gasket in place of the PVC would work as well.Short Sheet Metal Screws with Butyl Rubber calk on the threads. Make sure they Don't protrude into the interior of the pipe.
A 3" slip fix is at least 3 3/4" wide on the slider part of the slip fix. He said he doesn't have that much room. A 3" slip fix is 40.00? Plus bucks to buy.There is also something called “PVC Slip Fix”
We used them a lot when people would puncture their irrigation lines
ARE YOU NUTS! That would clog the system, of course!Pretty disappointed that nobody has suggested uncoiled rice yet.
That or Gorilla Tape for the win!
That should have been the end of the thread. Doesn't anyone watch TV anymore?
That should have been the end of the thread. Doesn't anyone watch TV anymore?
The easy way out would be ... or cut a PVC coupler in half, primer it and glue it over the holes...