Yes and NO depending on what kind of piping system. for drain connections yes like tub drains or fixture traps but you need access to all slip/compression fittings. and NO you can not use PVC to brass for like a discharge pipe on a waterheater PRV (pressure relief valve) or any hot water piping system
You can join PVC pipes to brass only by mechanical connections, ie a brass fitting with threads on the brass pipe and a PVC fitting with compatible threads on the PVC pipe.
You need 2 mechanical fittings with compatible threads. One is PVC to glue to the PVC and one is brass to solder to the brass. Then they screw together.
Yes, you can glue PVC to Bras by using an epoxy glue. PVC glue will not stick to brass.
In general you would only do this if you need to connect a section of brass piping to a pvc section.
If the brass threaded nipple is a male end and the PVC side is a female end, wrapping thread tape around the nipple and then screwing it into the female PVC end will provide a secure and watertight connection.
Yes, as long as there is a mechanical connection , ie threaded. You cannot glue them to each other.
Lead wipe a brass nipple into the lead pipe and then use a female adapter x PVC on the brass threads
It will connect to the PVC pipe into the wall which ultimately will connect into the main sewer line outside.
Yes, that is what they are made for.
Yeah you can
NO, PVC is very sensitive to which glue is used. In Domestic pipe applications you should use Weld-On 711
no
You can not glue brass directly to PVC pipe. Use male/female adapters to join these two materials. ie, a male threaded PVC end fitting glued to the PVC pipe and a female threaded brass fitting screwed onto that.
nothing no reaction both are inert towards each other....
It depends on the size of PVC. For smaller PVC you can buy fittings that glue onto the PVC and allow a thread x barb fitting to be installed. For larger pipe you should get a brass compression fitting that clamps down on the PVC and adapts to a thread x barb fitting.