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Steel-to-Brass: do I really need a dielectric union?

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rbattelle

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I'm installing a thermal expansion tank made of steel into a cast brass tee fitting (3/4 NPT threaded). I'd like to avoid a dielectric union if possible (I hear many stories of them leaking).



My house is grounded through the water pipes. I would think that would bleed off any currents generated between the dissimilar metals.



What do you guys think?



Ryan
 
Yes, do not install copper/bronze to carbon. The dissimilar metals will eat each other. Go to a large plumbing supply house to get one (I don't think the home stores even carry them). It will be plated carbon NPT with a plastic isolator on one side and usually has a soft sealing rubber gasket on the face. I don't know if you can get NPT on the copper side as I've only seen them in a sweat joint configuration. I' ve seen some really old ones in service and can't see that they're unreliable.
 
Ask at a Plumbing shop, I have seen a special fitting for such use, it's claimed that in time the improper connection will crumble.
 
My understanding is that it's not the electrical grounding, but the different metals acting (chemically) like a weak battery. (made worse by the heat)
 
All right, I'll get the dielectric union.



Of course, solder and copper are different metals but no one seems to consider that a problem. :confused:



Ryan
 
And it just occurred to me: my water heater is steel, but the T&P relief valve and the drain valve are both brass and both threaded directly to the steel without any kind of electrical isolation.



What gives? :confused:
 
at work we use brass fittings with steel and cast iron with nothing more than pipe dope sealing. the fittings usually fail from erosion from the flow of the water inside [engine cooling water]



you could always drive in an extra/external ground rod and tie that into the panel. .



does it need to be a cast brass fitting? no steel or iron fitting avalable?
 
How long (time) are we talking for failure between brass/copper and carbon steel? Years, decades, what? Is brass to copper ok, but not either to carbon steel?
 
I'd rather not put iron or steel into the system because it's a house and I don't want rusty water (yes, the expansion tank is steel but apparently it won't put rust in the system).



I think I'm going to just put 'em together and see what happens. Brass and copper are compatible, but not brass/steel or copper/steel.



Ryan
 
stainless to brass ok, carbon steel or stainless to copper bad ( need phenolic washers and special valves) brass is one of those weird materials that is for the most part inert. copper on the other hand is not.
 
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