Nice brazing Guy, putting in some soft copper instead of the hard tubing,
Ha, thanks for saying it, but my silver soldering is crap. Some people seem to be able to end up with the joint nice and shiny, but I don't know how. Feathered reducing oxy-acet flame, trying not to overheat, but while ensuring the silver solder is definitely wicked all the way into the joint I always get a black-looking result. Never mind, it works.
The pipe is all hard copper. I happened to have a piece that was just a few inches longer than needed, so the repair was zero cost. Bends are done by heating the desired bend section to red heat to soften it, let it cool, then use an outside spring pipe bender. Easy. The joints are done by heating the end of one piece to red heat to soften the copper, then hammering in a pipe expander tool. Then the end of the other pipe is marked with a felt pen at the required join depth, so you can be sure it really has slid in far enough before silver-soldering. Coat both surfaces with flux, push the joint together, silver-solder. Check the joint underside with a mirror. And then don't drink the tap water for a couple of days till all the fluorine-based flux has definitely dissolved and flushed out.
though I would have put a PVC pipe over them to keep the roots away so they do not crack the pipe further.
Well, I put all that pipework in the ground back around 1999. Then after the new house was built, around 2003 some eucalypt seedlings popped up in the back yard. Thinking they would be small varieties like most of the other trees around, I transferred them to the front yard, which I was landscaping around that time. Surprise surprise, they turned out to be very fast-growing enormous trees. The pipe broke directly under one of them. Now they have established major root systems I think the new pipe route is safe. I like the trees a lot, so don't mind this extra work.
Does Australia have water loss insurance for burst piping, or is the water cost so low that you only notice on the next bill the use is high.
I'm informed by a plumber that if given photos of the leak, the water board will adjust the bill to be normal. Fingers crossed that this is true. Hence took a lot of photos.
Anyway this was a little test I did this week, to see if this solid block of rust would turn into a micrometer again after spending time in salt air. A little current in a plastic pot filled with acetic acid ( only thing to hand, was not going to use anything toxic like NaOH which was the other thing to hand) and a scrap graphite vane as anode.
Still have a few left over, expensive things those vanes, especially if the couriers drop the pump.
So who left it in salt air? Not you? And did your restoration work?
Just for amusement, a pic below of other potential carbon electrodes. Some WW2 vintage anti-aircraft searchlight carbon rods (I have a lot of these), and also large motor carbon brushes. (Also have a big box full. Some are pure carbon, others are a carbon-copper mix.)