Sprinkler pipe is sitting on my TDC flange
Your duct flange is not a pipe hanger. Stop before it gets buried, document the conflict, and coordinate clearance/support instead of letting the pipe load or vibrate against the duct.
['A heavy pipe resting on a TDC/Ductmate flange can bow the flange, create leaks, transfer vibration, crush insulation, and make both trades look bad later.', 'Do not just drop your duct or bend the flange without coordination. Verify the pipe support, your hanger elevations, ceiling/grid space, access, and approved clearances. The recovery may be moving the pipe, dropping/offsetting duct, changing hanger elevations, or escalating the clash.']
Stop if
- Use this as training guidance. The foreman, approved drawings, project specs, manufacturer installation instructions, employer safety policy, and AHJ/code requirements always control the final answer.
Check
- Pipe weight and vibration on duct can cause leaks, noise, failed inspections, and rework after ceilings close.
Steps
- Take photos showing the pipe resting on or touching the flange.
- Check whether the pipe has its own hangers/support independent of your duct.
- Check duct hanger rod length/elevation and whether a safe drop/offset is possible.
- Check ceiling height, grid, insulation, vibration, and access impacts before moving anything.
- Notify your foreman before the conflict gets covered by ceiling or insulation.
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