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View the thread, titled "32mm Vent." which is posted in UK Plumbers Forums on UK Plumbers Forums.

I have a cloakroom toilet that isn't connected to an outside vent. It's been there 100 years and I don't think it has ever been vented. The floor and wooden paneling were rotten and I ripped them out a long time ago when we bought the house, without ever using that toilet so I don't know if it creates a vacuum when flushed. I now want to replace the toilet and my question is will it need to be vented and if so is a 32mm air admittance valve sufficient for a toilet or is that size just suitable for a sink? The other toilets in the house are all vented through an external stack but this one isn't connected to the others. Thanks.
 
No, not seperate system. I guess they all meet somewhere but I'm not certain where. It's a 120 year old building with a couple of more modern extensions and the drainage system is a bit of a mystery in places.
 
my question is really "is the 32mm vent sufficient for a toilet or is it only used on a sink". Cheers.
Hi Simon
The reason you haven't had a quick yes/no answer is that it depends, strictly speaking, on how the flow calculations come out. There's not enough information on pipe sizes, lengths, bends and the relative heights involved, and I'm not competent to do them anyway!
But as a general rule of thumb, where a wc is part of the equation, 75mm and upwards seems to be recommended for an AAV.

There's Guidance from BPF Group https://www.bpfpipesgroup.com/media/29598/Air-admittance-valves-for-domestic-properties.pdf
that says:
Renovations and Property Alterations
AAVs can be installed on stub stacks. This presents a useful access point, but care should be taken to ensure that the AAV is accessible and that any boxing is vented.
On the ground floor, a separate group of appliances (e.g. cloakroom) may be connected to a drain using an unventilated stub stack.
An AAV is not required if the vertical drop from the centre line of the WC branch to the invert level of the drain is no more than 1.5 m and the centre line of the highest appliance is no more than 2.5 m to the level invert of the drain. However, where stub stacks discharge directly to a drain, the head of the drain should be ventilated.
(Which you're saying it is)
AAVs are widely used on stub stacks to avoid any doubt about ventilation and to provide a convenient access point for maintenance.
 
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