| Size: | 2-1/2" |
|---|---|
| Connection Type: | Socket x Socket |
| Connection Method: | Socket |
| Handle Style: | T-Handle |
| Material: | PVC |
| Color: | White |
| Pressure Rating: | 150 PSI @ 73°F |
| Application: | Plumbing |

It is full port or unrestricted flow. -Brent.
Full flow
It is full flow when completely open and shut completely when turned 45 degrees.
You would not be able to connect PEX fittings to a solvent PVC ball valve, but you could connect PEX to a threaded PVC ball valve with the right fittings.
No. This is a glue on PVC valve. Would not hook to pex without pex to PVC adapters. Buy a ball valve built for pex they have pex fitting built right in. PVC valves also turn hard and even harder when the sit unused.
You can't glue pex lines into pvc fittings. If you got a ball valve with threaded (not solvent) ends, you could get fittings for each side to go from threaded to pex, crimp on the pex, then get fittings to solder onto the copper lines to crimp the other end of the pex to. If you're looking to avoid soldering, look at the sharkbite fittings, there's no soldering involved. If you do solder on the copper to pex fittings, they make pex ball valves that you wouldn't need the adapters for. By the time you but the adapters and crimp rings (if needed), you might as well just but the pex valve.
My Answer: Not directly, to my knowledge. However, how I solved a similar situation is this: * From the PVC valve, glue a short piece of PVC then glue a slip to male pipe thread fitting to the PVC pipe * Next fit a female pipe thread to PEX crimp connector to the PVC fitting * From there you can begin your runs of PEX or copper. Hope this helps.
I've done something similar, first you'll have to find adaptors for the PVC valve, 3/4" male solvent to ether male or female treaded on the other end. Then get pex brass fittings to fit into the PVC adaptors sticking out of the valve. Then attach your pex tubing to the brass pex fittings which will be attached to the valve though the adaptors. Finally use pex fittings to adapt to your copper line. Look through the PexSupply web site for the parts you need, I've always found the necessary parts there for issues like this.
Yes, these valves are NSF approved.
That would not work. It is not recommended to glue a plastic valve to a copper line.