Not unless you have a transitional fitting. The diameters of the two are not the same. I know sometimes it can feel like they fit together snugly but they will not hold the pressure.
ANS 2 - AS he says above, you can glue it but it's only usable for drainage, not regular water pressure. Use Weld-On 794 to glue it
You can not do this. A -Their fittings and pipes are not exactly the same size. B There is no transition cement (or cement that works on both.)
-You must do a mechanical joint. -( a threaded fitting on each piece)
No, it won't stick. Use Oatey CPVC cement.
Only for drainage, it won't hold under pressure.
Yes, but not with PVC glue.
yes.
I don't understand why you'd want to do that . CPVC glue is expensive, PVC glue is cheap and glues PVC pipe better.
There is no special PVC pipe. CPVC can be used for hot water applications or in my opinion just use PEX pipe.
It depends on the size of PVC. For smaller PVC you can buy fittings that glue onto the PVC and allow a thread x barb fitting to be installed. For larger pipe you should get a brass compression fitting that clamps down on the PVC and adapts to a thread x barb fitting.
Term used with cast-iron, PVC, CPVC and ABS pipe. Cast-Iron; The plain end of a cast-iron pipe. The spigot is inserted into the bell end of the next pipe to make a water tight joint. PVC, CPVC or ABS; A male end of a fitting the same size as the pipe that is inserted into the slip (hub) end of a fitting.
You can, bearing in mind that it will not stand any pressure or force separating the joint.
No, you'll need to put a pipe adapter on the PVC, then use a standard PEX crimp fitting. Or you can use a SharkBite fitting. They work well for this.
You can purchase PVC and CPVC piping at any local hardware or building supply store. Plumbing supply stores are less common, but you may have one near you. Be certain that you purchase the correct primer and glue for the type of pipe you intend to use, and use the correct pipe for the correct purpose.
CPVC is better suited for hot water
no, use CPVC instead.
You can not glue brass directly to PVC pipe. Use male/female adapters to join these two materials. ie, a male threaded PVC end fitting glued to the PVC pipe and a female threaded brass fitting screwed onto that.
The type of service they are to be used for In a home PVC is used for the drains,the drain vents,main out going sewer line,water supply lines for a boiler/heating system or sprinkler systems. In a home CPCV is used to supply water to sinks,toilets, showers,hot water heater and exterior faucets... Because of the difference in usage there is also a difference in the wall thickness between the PVC pipe and CPVC pipe... So a 3/4 in PVC fitting will not match up to a 3/4 in CPVC pipe and vise versa...
buy another one? or just make homemade missiles. or you can turn it into a dart gun with glue and some PVC or CPVC pipe.