Copper – Plumbing and Heating
Copper is a favourite metal among machinists, plumbers and other industrial professionals. This metal has been used for at least ten thousand years and historians believe that only iron and gold were used as functional metals before ancient peoples discovered copper. Copper’s natural colour is red, though over time, with prolonged exposure to oxygen, copper can turn green.
Heating and plumbing professionals use copper for pipes and many of the different electrical devices inside their systems and have done so for nearly a century. In recent years, copper industry professionals have started charging higher prices for their copper pieces because there is a fear that the demand for copper is higher than the metal’s available supply.
Copper tubing is the most reliable transport mechanism for water in the United Kingdom and in recent years it has also been used to house the transport of natural gas. The “quality standard” in the heating and plumbing industry in the UK is copper and there is not one single building code that forbids the metal’s use. This metal is durable and strong and can protect the health of humans and larger organisms by hindering the growth of bacteria on its surface.
Copper has proven to be one of the most versatile materials in the domestic plumbing industry. This metal can carry natural gas and water and is non corrosive and resists deterioration. There are many UK based companies that are so sure of copper’s strength that they offer fifty year warranties on all materials that make use of the metal.
In the UK, heating industry professionals have agreed that radiant heating systems are the best household heating systems that one can install in a house. Copper is the best material this underfloor heating. Copper pipes do not pose any risk of leakage or endangering the structural integrity of a home. UK homeowners have begun installing underfloor heating because it is the most efficient method of heating one’s house and it is the most cost effective.
Copper has also been used in refrigeration units and air conditioners because, as easily as it distributes heat, it also effectively distributes cooler temperatures. Air conditioning manufacturers have started incorporating copper into their units with a resounding positive response. Copper has increased the lifetime of the machines as well as their effectiveness in “beating the heat.”
Copper is also known for being “green” friendly. This metal is easily recycled and resistant to germs and bacteria. Humans need copper to help create haemoglobin and the copper in a person’s system helps the body fight against high cholesterol levels and coronary heart disease.
Tal Potishman, editor of Heating Central, writes articles about boilers, central heating, plumber Bradford, underfloor heating and solar thermal. He specializes in helping save money by advising on efficient heating.
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