Dear
~Christina~;
Would you allow to have a different Idea, because all three,
LDPE,
HDPE, and
PVC have several disadvantages?
I think one requirement should be that you have not to fix it every ~3 - 5 years, so a few properties of the plastic pipe must be kept in mind:
- a.) The pipe should be rugged enough to hold during summer and a cold winter too, because if a part may be also on the outer side of the house.
- b.) If it should be used for drinking water then it should not contaminate the water in any way.
- c.) If for waist water, it should resist against strong bases and also against acids and oxidiser as Bleach.
- d.) You may think of others too, but that’s already enough to put all three out of the race.
LDPE and
HDPE get “very” hard at cold temperature because their
Cristallinity, and are therefore very fragile during winter time.
PVC requires a Lot of “
Plasticizer”, because
PVC is by its nature very brittle, and that’s a real disadvantage for drinking water, but also for waist water, because with oxygen and other chemicals PVC turns with time back to its brittle state.
IMHO I would use/synthesize
PP, and maybe mix it later with another Thermoplastic to avoid
Cristallinity as much as possible too.
PP doesn’t need “
Plasticizer” and has a quite excellent resistance against almost all chemicals.
As a Thermoplastic it is also easier to form and bring into shape.
It has also other good properties as you can see on: "
Polypropylene”.
I hope my small idea may be of help to you.
(In our streets we use recycled PP for waist water.)
Good Luck!
ARGOS
++