I once moved into a house and had a plumber come out to connect the fridge to the water (there was some custom work that needed to be done).
There was a plastic line there already and that line hadn't been used in atleast a year (previous tenants kept their fridge in the garage). I remember asking the plumber if we should replace that plastic line and he said no, I even told him it hadn't been used in over a year.
A week or so after he did this work I'm walking through my living room and my socks are getting wet. At first I couldn't figure out what was going on until I realized that line had split (as I expected it to) and was leaking, said leak having moved into the living room where it was making the wood floors damp.
To this day I don't understand why that plumber thought that would be ok when I, as a complete layman, understood what happens to plastic lines that go unused for that long (they dry and crack).
What kind of plastic line? I've used a decent amount of name brand LLDPE tubing, and I've never seen it fail or even appear to degrade.
I have had issues with compression connectors at the ends (they don't like to be too loose or too tight), and I've seen plenty of failures of the really crappy washers that get used in "female compression" connectors.
There was a plastic line there already and that line hadn't been used in atleast a year (previous tenants kept their fridge in the garage). I remember asking the plumber if we should replace that plastic line and he said no, I even told him it hadn't been used in over a year.
A week or so after he did this work I'm walking through my living room and my socks are getting wet. At first I couldn't figure out what was going on until I realized that line had split (as I expected it to) and was leaking, said leak having moved into the living room where it was making the wood floors damp.
To this day I don't understand why that plumber thought that would be ok when I, as a complete layman, understood what happens to plastic lines that go unused for that long (they dry and crack).