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Earlier this week I had a plumber rough in valve/piping for a shower renovation. Since then, I have decided to go back and redo the walls (long, long story) and, as a result, the final finished wall will be 1/4" thinner. I know for a fact that this change will leave the nipple of the tub spout exposed by roughly that difference. The shower valve should be ok, but I won't know for sure until tiling is complete.

Rather than calling the plumber back to redo the spout (and possibly the entire valve!), I would like to place 1/4" shims behind the straps that are securing the pipes to the blocking. My question is this: Can the copper pipes and soldered joints handle the very slight amount of pressure needed to shim the plumbing back that 1/4" or is it essential that the plumbing is secured as it would normally rest?

birchx
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    I'm sure it had just as much stress on it when it was shimmed and clamped. 1/4" over 2-3ft is almost nothing. – JPhi1618 Oct 23 '15 at 20:49

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You are fine. Copper is pretty pliable and one soft metal. I am assuming that this branch is already working and capped. So if you do have any issues you should know right away. Also I would tell the plumber what you did so he isn't pulling out his hair if something goes wrong.

DMoore
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