To me the bigger issue would be how much CFM does that thing have and is it enough to hook all those leads up to the manifold. But, I suppose they've already ran the numbers on that and figured it out.
Copper oxidizes, as a result it's always releasing something from a molecular level. Then there's the solder and flux from the solder. I'm no expert by any means, but this is pushing a gas into people.
As far as I'm aware, copper has pretty strong antimicrobial properties. It doesn't appear as if those pipes have been soldered together either. It looks like to me that they use pipe thread and pipe thread tape to assemble everything.
Why would copper be an issue?
To me the bigger issue would be how much CFM does that thing have and is it enough to hook all those leads up to the manifold. But, I suppose they've already ran the numbers on that and figured it out.
Copper oxidizes, as a result it's always releasing something from a molecular level. Then there's the solder and flux from the solder. I'm no expert by any means, but this is pushing a gas into people.
As far as I'm aware, copper has pretty strong antimicrobial properties. It doesn't appear as if those pipes have been soldered together either. It looks like to me that they use pipe thread and pipe thread tape to assemble everything.
Yes, and the CV has the shortest lifespan on copper. Pretty sure that's why it was used.