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View the thread, titled "Supporting pipes under floorboards + insulation" which is posted in UK Plumbers Forums on UK Plumbers Forums.

kasser

Gas Engineer
Hi,
How do I support with clips pipes run under a floating timber ground floor? The joists are too small to notch or drill into and in any case, there's plenty of space underneath. Where do you place the pipe clips if running perpendicular to the joists?
And if plastic pipes, this means lots of clips, every 300 mm for Speedfit! Lots of floorboards going up?
I've never had to do this yet.
Now I've got a job fitting central heating in a bungalow. Pipes could go under the wooden ground floor or over in the loft. Which route would you take? What insulation would you use? Finally, how do you fit the insulation snugly around with plastic pipe clips in the way?
 
Attic and down for me, but I can see the benefits of going under the floor too. Being old, if I was going under the floor, I would pipe in copper - safer from a leaking perspective, longer lasting, less clipping and fewer floorboards to lift.

For the attic route, pipe in plastic, possibly with copper droppers
 
Copper also for me. It will require very little support.
You could still use push fit fittings to the copper pipes if you wished so to avoid difficult soldering and fire risk.
 
You can get spacers for talon clips, that would give space to allow for insulation. Insulation doesn’t stop freezing, just which type depends on how long before it could freeze. Also I’d say up and over, if they ever fit a difficult floor (glued laminate) then if there’s an issue it’s harder to repair.
 
Do you fit the pipe clips on the bottom face of the joist facing the ground, when running pipes perpendicular? I've done it before for a gas pipe, not easy and it was just a couple of clips. I can't imagine having to do that every 300mm.
I would prefer to run it up and over but it does mean using more copper where the pipes are exposed, and more pipes generally.
 
Do you fit the pipe clips on the bottom face of the joist facing the ground, when running pipes perpendicular? I've done it before for a gas pipe, not easy and it was just a couple of clips. I can't imagine having to do that every 300mm.
I would prefer to run it up and over but it does mean using more copper where the pipes are exposed, and more pipes generally.

I can’t visualise what you mean, however you could use insulation around the pipe and use nail in clips, a bit harder to do, but achievable.
 
I can’t visualise what you mean, however you could use insulation around the pipe and use nail in clips, a bit harder to do, but achievable.

If the pipe runs across the joists, so underneath them, where do you fit the pipe clip? It'll have to be under the joists? So hanging off them in a way...
 
Ah I see what you mean now, I did try and envisage that, but was struggling. Depends on how much hammer room you have, use nail in ones, but I’d go with using copper so less spacing as opposed to every 300mm.
 
You can't wrap insulation around if you use the nail clips?
Copper more expensive 🙁
As the pipe won't be seen, plastic would have been ideal.
 
I doubt the nail clip with fit over and around the insulation that's over the pipe.

It depends, I have managed to insulate plastic in a loft and carefully clip 15mm nail in clip. Just push hard until the clip sinks into insulation, then hammer home. 🙂
 
Every now and then if there is enough room. Sometimes it's just easier to do that then lift all the boards.
 
My advice:-
Crawl under the floor, use Copper and clip every 3 foot (roughly). Solder the joints, watch your face and eyes for molten solder and your ear holes and nasal passages for the odd spider who might be a tad nosy......... some will stare at you like this
upload_2019-5-8_19-19-27.jpeg
and some will have no fear and ask who you are and what you want.

I had an apprentice with me a while back and I was surprised at how things have changed on the health and safety front (maybe they haven't but now they get drilled with it a lot longer than we did back in 1800 and frozen to death). Anyway, here is a bit of the type of advice he would have given!!

Mains power off, use battery lamps, observe all the panic and fear over confined spaces, fill a risk assessment form in, take a suitable fire extinguisher with you and mobile phone, tie a rope around your ankles and the hatch, make sure there is someone else in the building who knows you are under there etc etc, can't really remember much else he said because I was too busy crawling under the floor to get on with it.

Lagging:-
Foam and stand off clips is best in my opinion.

Who remembers Hair felt? that used to be popular didn't it? For those who do not, it was highly flammable and very dusty/hairy to work with. You could come out looking like Chewbacca after an hour or two under there wrapping pipes with that.
 
What did you do with the risk assessment form???
I understand how the strap band works with the insulation-wrapped pipe. But how do you clip a pipe with insulation around? You'll have to remove a small piece to allow for the pipe clip?
Someone needs to invent a long flexible support you can slide under the floorboard, screw to the joists at each end and then slide the pipes onto it. Job done. Basically doing the job of the plasterboard ceiling supporting the pipes that you run under the first floor.
 

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kasser

Gas Engineer
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Heating Engineer (Has GSR)

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Supporting pipes under floorboards + insulation
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