Discussion:
How to identify hot & cold stub outs??
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Sparky
2006-12-27 00:38:48 UTC
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I had a plumber do some water line rough-in a few years ago. Now I want
to connect a sink. Anyway - I'm having a hard time figuring out which
is the hot and which is the cold. One has a square cap - the other is
bullet shaped. Should I assume the square is the hot? Or the other way
around?? I tried testing both lines with the existing H/C water lines
with an ohm-meter to see what was connected to what - but it's all
grounded at the HW heater - so my result was moot.

ANY HELP HERE??
If someone could let me know - it'd be great. Searching by google is
drawing blanks..!

thanks
Jonathan
Mike Grooms
2006-12-27 11:05:21 UTC
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Sparky,

The one on the right is cold, probably. If you want to double
check, shut off the water to the water heater, drain the hot water lines
at a lower sink, then ease on one of the shut off valves. If water
comes out, it's the cold. If air sucks in it's the hot.
Ned Flanders
2006-12-27 21:55:21 UTC
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I'm suprised you couldnt find that on the web.
Like he said it is standard practice/code to put hot on the left and cold on
the right.
Did he get it right in the rest of your house?
Post by Mike Grooms
Sparky,
The one on the right is cold, probably. If you want to double check,
shut off the water to the water heater, drain the hot water lines at a
lower sink, then ease on one of the shut off valves. If water comes out,
it's the cold. If air sucks in it's the hot.
Paul
2021-07-15 00:45:02 UTC
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Turn on one of the valves and let trickle into a bucket in ten minutes or less it should be warm - if it’s the hot. Start with the left because that’s the norm. If you hock the sink and try it you can always switch the lines if it’s wrong
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For full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/plumbing/how-to-identify-hot-cold-stub-outs-2143-.htm
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