Clowning_Around
New member
Well a couple thoughts on that.So I was thinking to paint my 45's 90's T's ect a different color from the pipe. What's the best way to block off the inside of the fittings? Also I assume I wouldn't want the part of the pipe that goes into the fitting to be painted right? Any idea of how to figure that out?
Thanks
First if you prepaint, when you make the connections the primer n solvent will mess up the area it comes in contact with. Even if you keep the solvent job precise and clean, when you push them onto the pipe at best case /the least you will probably have a little disturbed finish at the fittings edge face, so be careful with that.
So if you look back art mine i did this but just not with different colors ay my pupe to bulkhead connections. I preprimed the pipe and let it dry. Then i masked it off with tape before painting the nearby surface, you can do the same with your pipe insert portions. As for the fittings, you could tape those off but i have another idea i like better. Get a scrap piece of pipe n dry fit it in the fitting, paint say 70% of that piece so that you can still grab the one side. Remove the dry fit scrap while the paint is wet and prop/ hang the fitting from the unpainted side. Rinse and repeat with all fittings and then hit the other sides up the following day after the first half is dry so you can yank on its side. Make sense?
Now for the easy way


I do recommend you do some test with scrap pipe and a couple cheap elbows before proceeding with your good plumbing.
Ok so the fun warning language - proceed at your own risk I'm not responsible for your following and/or not following these suggestions, there you've been warned

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