I have completely gutted my bathroom and on advice from my plumber I stripped out the old copper piping and I have laid plastic pipes to where the sink, toilet, bath and shower will go.
My plumber has installed a manifold system (if I'm saying it right!) in my airing cupboard. This takes a cold mains pressure feed and splits it and sends it out to all the cold supply plastic pipes. Equally there is a hot feed from my combi boiler for all the hot supply plastic piping. He has set this up using gate valves so each supply can be isolated if need be.
I have since read that gate valves should not be used for mains pressure and should only be used for low pressure systems. So has my plumber installed the wrong valves? He says that they can be used and he's installed loads like it and never had a problem.
If, as I suspect, they need to be changed, what do I change them for? Can I use just normal isolating valves (service valve types where you turn with a screwdriver)? I have seen the lever ones as well but the way my plumber has done this soldered manifold system the pipes are really close together and I don't think the valves would turn without hitting their neighbour one. Is another solution stop taps as well?
Also, should I be asking for full bore ones? Are most of these valves full bore anyway or do they need to state it?
Thanks in advance,
Daz
My plumber has installed a manifold system (if I'm saying it right!) in my airing cupboard. This takes a cold mains pressure feed and splits it and sends it out to all the cold supply plastic pipes. Equally there is a hot feed from my combi boiler for all the hot supply plastic piping. He has set this up using gate valves so each supply can be isolated if need be.
I have since read that gate valves should not be used for mains pressure and should only be used for low pressure systems. So has my plumber installed the wrong valves? He says that they can be used and he's installed loads like it and never had a problem.
If, as I suspect, they need to be changed, what do I change them for? Can I use just normal isolating valves (service valve types where you turn with a screwdriver)? I have seen the lever ones as well but the way my plumber has done this soldered manifold system the pipes are really close together and I don't think the valves would turn without hitting their neighbour one. Is another solution stop taps as well?
Also, should I be asking for full bore ones? Are most of these valves full bore anyway or do they need to state it?
Thanks in advance,
Daz