Re: HELP - bath waste problem
I've convinced the client to let me run the bath waste around the wall, behind a boxed in skirting board. This will give me ample drop. I can then go down through the floor and connect to the existing pipe next to where it connects to the stack.
The current basin waste, I will improve and go over the existing notches. This won't give me much drop over the 1mt run, but should be at least 10mm, which is FAR, FAR better than it was.
After fully removing the floor today, I discovered the wonders of the previous "professional" plumbing job. The bath waste goes upwards to the other end of the room - only just up - but still up (not down!). Once it right angles and heads for the stack, they have connected to the old pipe with a compression fitting, which is where the whole pipe sags. This therefore sags and gives a nice uphill run (again) for the water to try and make its way to the stack (which incredibly they've actually managed to run downwards (must have been a different plumber).
All in all, the most hilarious installation I have come across. Oh, I forgot to mention that even the short run for the basin waste was angled downwards away from where it should have been flowing. God only knows how this installation managed to get rid of water. Sheer luck. The pipes were still full of residual water - as there was simply no way it could drain away.
Thanks for all the help chaps.
Paul
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