never heard of the fittings,now you can run 2 fixtures off that line,not fittings
It would be wonderful if you also gave the pressure and told about friction losses
line segment to the nearest half inch is measured using the distance formula.
Yes. 3+2+6=11. If you divide 11 and 3, your answer is 3r2. You will have two 3 inch sides and one 5 inch side.
The answer depends on the flow rate or the water pressure, not just the pipe size.
A line that cuts a segment in half is a bisector
1/4 inch line, 3/8ths fittings.
By the use of Flagg Flow T.P Fitting adapters and Cx M or C x F adapters attached to the T.P fitting T.P = threadless pipe
It would be wonderful if you also gave the pressure and told about friction losses
You do not need tape on any flared fitting, brake or regular. The brake line and the fittings are different size and thread type than regular copper line and fittings. You can't mix them.
Not many. Maybe one at best. Half inch copper line is too small for most needs. 3/4 only costs a little more. You will go completely mad waiting for a bathtub to fill with half inch lines. Every flush of a toilet will make the shower die out.
line segment to the nearest half inch is measured using the distance formula.
Depending what you are wanting to supply. Basin, shower, toilet, bidet, kitchen can be fed with a half inch line Main line and bath can be fed with a three quarter inch line
You dont as the diameter is to small to pass the fittings . We use Ram Jet or water jetting
about a half an inch
The best way to connect a 1/4 inch copper tubing to a water supply line is by using a compression fitting. This fitting allows for a secure and leak-proof connection between the tubing and the water supply line.
To indent the first line of each paragraph one-half inch from the left margin, you can set the paragraph formatting to have a half-inch first line indent. This can typically be done in word-processing software like Microsoft Word by going to the "Paragraph" settings and adjusting the indentation options. Simply specify a 0.5-inch first line indent to achieve the desired formatting.
To repair a copper water line effectively, start by turning off the water supply. Use a pipe cutter to remove the damaged section of the pipe. Clean the ends of the pipe and the fittings with sandpaper. Apply flux to the cleaned areas and solder the fittings onto the pipe using a torch. Allow the pipe to cool and then turn the water supply back on to check for leaks.