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    plumbing troubleshooting

    Install or replace shutoff valve

    Common symptoms: add shutoff valve; replace main shutoff; install branch valve; SharkBite ball valve; sweat ball valve

    Stop and call a pro if:

    • main-line work may require utility curb-stop shutoff
    • permit may be required for main shutoff replacement
    • torch work near combustibles requires shielding and a fire-watch

    Step-by-step diagnostic flow

    1. Step 1

      Is this a main shutoff replacement, a branch shutoff, or adding a fixture shutoff — and can you isolate water upstream of the work area?

    2. Step 2

      Does your jurisdiction require a permit or licensed plumber for main shutoff replacement?

      Many municipalities do. Check before cutting.

    3. Step 3

      Where will the valve be installed?

    4. Step 4

      What is the existing pipe material at the install point?

    5. Step 5

      Which install method do you plan to use?

      SharkBite/push-fit is the most DIY-friendly across all three materials.

    Possible outcomes

    Stop — call a plumber and/or the utility

    high confidence

    Replacing a main shutoff without reliable upstream isolation risks an uncontrolled flood and may require utility coordination at the curb stop.

    Safe next steps
    • Call your water utility to ask about scheduling a curb-stop shutoff
    • Hire a licensed plumber for the main valve swap
    No reliable upstream shutoff for main work

    Stop — verify permit requirements first

    high confidence

    Unpermitted main-line work can fail inspection at sale time and may violate code.

    Safe next steps
    • Call the local building department
    • Ask whether owner-occupants can self-permit, or if a licensed plumber must do the work
    Permit status unverified for main work

    Stop — in-wall valves need a pro and an access panel

    high confidence

    Concealed valves typically require an access panel by code so they can be serviced; in-wall work near framing also raises water-damage and fire risk during sweat.

    Safe next steps
    • Plan an access panel location with a plumber
    • Reconsider whether the valve can be placed in an accessible spot upstream
    Concealed valve location

    Stop — galvanized steel work is not DIY-friendly

    high confidence

    Galvanized requires threading or transition fittings, and old galvanized often crumbles when disturbed.

    Safe next steps
    • Get a plumber to add a transition (galvanized to copper or PEX) and a ball valve at that point
    Galvanized steel piping

    Stop — identify the pipe material first

    high confidence

    Choosing the wrong fitting for an unidentified pipe causes leaks or damaged pipe.

    Safe next steps
    • Photograph the pipe and any visible labels
    • Compare to material samples at a supply house or ask a plumber
    Unknown pipe material

    Proceed with a push-fit (SharkBite) ball valve

    high confidence

    Push-fit ball valves install on copper, PEX, or CPVC without a torch and are the safest DIY route.

    Safe next steps
    • Shut water off and drain the line by opening a lower fixture
    • Cut out a section the depth of two valve insertions, deburr inside and out
    • Mark insertion depth on each pipe end, install PEX stiffeners if applicable
    • Push valve fully on, restore water slowly, check for leaks
    What to document for a pro
    • Pipe outer diameter
    • Photo of the install location

    Proceed with a sweat (soldered) ball valve

    medium confidence

    Sweat is durable and inexpensive but requires torch skill, clean prep, and clearance from combustibles.

    Safe next steps
    • Confirm 6+ inches of clearance from framing/drywall or use a heat shield and fire-watch
    • Cut pipe square, deburr, clean both pipe and fitting bright with emery cloth, flux both surfaces
    • Open the valve fully (or remove handle/seat per manufacturer) before heating to protect seals
    • Heat fitting until solder melts on contact, feed solder around the joint, let cool undisturbed before pressurizing

    Proceed with a PEX crimp or expansion ball valve

    high confidence

    PEX joints are reliable when made with the correct tool for the system in use.

    Safe next steps
    • Use the correct ring type for your PEX (crimp vs clamp vs PEX-A expansion) and the matching tool
    • Verify with the go/no-go gauge on crimp/clamp rings
    • Restore water slowly, check for leaks
    Diagnostic guidance only. If unsure, stop and call a licensed professional — gas, electrical, and refrigerant work is hazardous to untrained users.

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