Search the forum,

Discuss Clay rodding point reinforcement in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

Messages
3
Hi, looking for some help/advice please...

I have a rodding point (just off our driveway) for the main waste leading to an ancient septic tank. It’s an uncapped vertical clay pipe that currently sits a couple of inches proud of the ground with a grate balanced on top. The problem has been that larger delivery vehicles occasionally catch it when turning, which recently (unsurprisingly!) resulted in both the rodding pipe and drain, also clay, cracking - now repaired.

We’ve stuck a traffic cone on top of it as a stop gap, but I’m keen to put a more permanent fix in place that will allow the rodding point to be driven over (occasionally) without a major risk of the clay pipes breaking again.

My thoughts are to dig down and cut the clay pipe off below ground level with an angle grinder or hacksaw, to allow some sort of heavy duty cap to be fitted. But I guess there would be some sort of concrete/brick reinforcement required in order that the cap/clay pipe doesn’t take the full weight of any rogue wheels.

Any pointers very much appreciated.

Thanks.
 
How big is the rodding point. If only a few inches, can you not form a hardstanding around it ans slightly higher? Then the vehicle's weight will be taken by the hardstanding instead of the rodding point...
 

Reply to Clay rodding point reinforcement in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

Similar plumbing topics

Hi, basic question, any insight much appreciated. Looking to have an outdoor tap in my front porch fed from 15mm pex coming up from suspended floor. Pic 1 is inside porch, pex temporarily clipped to give an idea of pipe placement (ignore shoddy blockwork of booted cowboy builder!), Pic 2 is...
Replies
6
Views
218
Hi, Can anyone advise as to why the cold water to my bathroom keeps airlocking? This originally happened about 12 months ago and has happened 3-4 times since. It’s an upstairs bathroom, fed from a tank in the attic. The tank is about 8 Meters away and feeds a bath, sink and toilet. The tank...
Replies
9
Views
301
The fittings below are for a mixer bar attached to a self contained shower. i.e not a wall. The attaching screws have snapped. I could get two new brackets, dismantle that existing one and start again or I could try and re attach via those screws, removing the broken ones from the plate and wall...
Replies
1
Views
175
Creating content since 2001. Untold Media.

Newest Plumbing Threads

Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock