We had a new bathroom built last year. Mould on the kitchen ceiling shows that it has been leaking for a while and the builder called in the plumber to investigate.
He took out a panel from the floor and found that the leak is on the connection of the shower waste to the 4" pipe. The waste pipes are close to various beams and it would be difficult and disruptive to re-do the pipework. He therefore decided to slap a lot of solvent weld round the various bits of the strap boss and told me that he couldn't guarantee it would work but it would weld the plastic together. He asked me to test after the weekend.
I am not convinced that putting solvent on the surface of a connection will weld anything, as you presumably need pressure between the two parts that have been coated. I was also concerned that the expansion and contraction of the 50mm shower waste will stress the repair and re-open it at some time in future.
Do you think that this will provide a long-term fix or is it likely to break down again in the near future. I don't want the hassle of remembering to access the cupboard and check it periodically. What would you do?
Thanks,
John
He took out a panel from the floor and found that the leak is on the connection of the shower waste to the 4" pipe. The waste pipes are close to various beams and it would be difficult and disruptive to re-do the pipework. He therefore decided to slap a lot of solvent weld round the various bits of the strap boss and told me that he couldn't guarantee it would work but it would weld the plastic together. He asked me to test after the weekend.
I am not convinced that putting solvent on the surface of a connection will weld anything, as you presumably need pressure between the two parts that have been coated. I was also concerned that the expansion and contraction of the 50mm shower waste will stress the repair and re-open it at some time in future.
Do you think that this will provide a long-term fix or is it likely to break down again in the near future. I don't want the hassle of remembering to access the cupboard and check it periodically. What would you do?
Thanks,
John