- May 23, 2015
- 35,144
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- Member Type
- Heating Engineer (Has GSR)
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In short, - he isn't a plumber.
Amazed that the "plumber" actually took those photos of that work he did and sent them to you!
Bit like a burglar taking a selfie when stealing your property and then sending you the photo. 🙂
Usually work like that is photographed by the customer to have proof or make complaint to the installer. (Or some of us take photos for hall of shame plumbing work)
I wouldn't want the other work to be completed with same person.
Just out of interest, you must have had some thoughts on whether it has been done correctly otherwise you wouldn't be asking the questions on here.
Even six inches more waste pipe and an elbow would have improved that situation.
I dislike sharing basin and shower wastes. I have done it, but would not ever do it out of choice.
Looks like your plumber has used copper pipe to transition from Hep to Speedfit which is the most correct way of making the transition.
The purpose of inserts (according to a merchant who had spoken to a plastic pipe company rep) is they ensure the pipe is and remains perfectly round. They should always be used (unless you're making a joint that only needs to work for 5 minutes). Not sure how you can tell they are absent without dismantling.
Hots and cold should not be run together unless properly insulated to keep the cold water at a hygienic temperature.
Get him to re do it as your not happy better now than later
Makes me think he's not a plumber anyone can put pushfit pipe together And glue waste pipe
might need to slot the joist the basin end
No as you can't unglue the fittings
Hmm... I can try, but I know it'll be an awkward conversation. I already asked him whether he thought the lack of a fall would pose a problem and he basically said "it's fine how I've done it, just trust me please".
Look up the rules on joist notching and drilling. 50%! I'm going to stick my neck out and say you can push the boundaries a bit, as the joists could well be over-engineered in the first place (and sometimes there's no choice), but a notch should be 1/8 of the joist height maximum...
Shared waste:
Let's assume shared section is only used by one appliance at the time as you don't tend to shower while using basin. So it's okayish that both wastes can't flow properly at the same time. Most likely problems are that washbasin draining will throw a slug of water down which might cause pressure at the shower waste, pushing the foul air (and some water possibly) into the shower tray, particularly if the shared section is in any way restictive. Or one appliance could suck the water out of the trap on the other and foul air will enter the bathroom. Or, weirdly, both could happen.
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