Wow! I really appreciate all that info Carpenter. Reckon this should be made a key post.
I reckon I'm where you were 7 years ago: sick of being messed around by plumbers, generally competent in many other areas of construction and so I want to educate myself about how to do basic plumbing as I don't want to have to call in plumbers for small jobs.
I'll search for some tutorials on the web and get a couple of books for some light bedtime reading
but in the short term I need to get these appliances up and running so here's what I think I need, if you could let me know if I'm on the right lines it'd be a great help:
To break off a hot feed for the washing machine from the existing hot pipe:
-2 qualpex plastic inserts
-1 qualpex appliance valve (my understanding is the pipe supplied with appliance will screw into this?)
For the taps:
-2 isolating valves (one for each tap) like this: [broken link removed]
-2 ½ inch compression fittings (I checked and these are fine to use with qualpex as long as the qualpex inserts are placed into the pipes
Tools needed:
-pipe cutter
-pipe vice
-qualpex pipe cutter
-qualpex lubricant
-Boss White/Green
-2 adjustable spanners
-wire wool & half round file (for cleaning spurs off pipe ends)
I’ve just had a look on the web and I reckon I can handle the compression joints and it’ll be good to get experience with them. A mate said that Tectite joints are too easy so he didn’t trust that they could be as good as a compression joint - what's your view on this?
The one thing I’m not clear on is how to join the isolation valves to the qualpex: do I need a compression fitting on each side or can the isolation valve just be connected straight to the pipe?
Plumber has left the cold feed for sink with a similar fitting to the ones for the appliances to screw into. (i.e. female fitting with switch handle). Will I just take this off and use a qualpex joint to join it to the new bit of qualpex that will be connected to the cold tap?