Hi there,
I am looking to quote on fitting a new outside tap for a customer and just want to run this by those with more experience before I quote on something stupid and send a notice to the water board that then gets declined.
Ideally, the pipework would be nearly all internal, but due to the design of the house and the garden, that would mean an extensive pipe run through the lounge and it would end up being a messy installation unless I take up floors or similar.
Running through the kitchen wall does not take the outside tap to a useful position.
The downstair toilet is a better position and is where I could fit an isolator, double check valve, draincock, and then run the pipe through the outside wall and roughly horizontally along the garden boundary wall to a convenient location for the tap itself. Obviously no amount of lagging will totally protect the pipe, but my intention would be to put a slight fall down to the outside tap - this way, the external pipe run could be mostly drained just by isolating and leaving the outside tap open. I'll fit a draincock to the lowest point inside, but I bet no one will ever use it.
Is this a mad idea, or am I thinking along the right lines?
Any advice appreciated.
Thanks,
Ric
I am looking to quote on fitting a new outside tap for a customer and just want to run this by those with more experience before I quote on something stupid and send a notice to the water board that then gets declined.
Ideally, the pipework would be nearly all internal, but due to the design of the house and the garden, that would mean an extensive pipe run through the lounge and it would end up being a messy installation unless I take up floors or similar.
Running through the kitchen wall does not take the outside tap to a useful position.
The downstair toilet is a better position and is where I could fit an isolator, double check valve, draincock, and then run the pipe through the outside wall and roughly horizontally along the garden boundary wall to a convenient location for the tap itself. Obviously no amount of lagging will totally protect the pipe, but my intention would be to put a slight fall down to the outside tap - this way, the external pipe run could be mostly drained just by isolating and leaving the outside tap open. I'll fit a draincock to the lowest point inside, but I bet no one will ever use it.
Is this a mad idea, or am I thinking along the right lines?
Any advice appreciated.
Thanks,
Ric