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Bathroom waste pipe question

Becles
Posts: 13,183 Forumite


Busy refitting our bathroom. In a previous life, it used to be a seperate toilet and bathroom, but the previous owner knocked it all into one big room. The toilet stuck out a bit, as in this picture:
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v196/becles/before2.jpg
It was just a stud wall behind the toilet, so we decided to remove that and move the toilet back to make the room bigger. The soil pipe is tucked in the corner, so we knew we would have to box round that.
However we've got a problem with the pipework. Here's another pic:
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v196/becles/pipes.jpg
1) What is the bit with the yellow tape wrapped around the end for? Can it be removed?
2) The pipe that runs along the floor from left to right is the waste from the bath and sink. Ever since I moved in, the bath has been slow to drain, and we've think it's because the water runs uphill where it bends round to go into the soil pipe.
Can this be altered so the pipe goes straight into the soil pipe, or is the uphill bend needed to stop smells?
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v196/becles/before2.jpg
It was just a stud wall behind the toilet, so we decided to remove that and move the toilet back to make the room bigger. The soil pipe is tucked in the corner, so we knew we would have to box round that.
However we've got a problem with the pipework. Here's another pic:
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v196/becles/pipes.jpg
1) What is the bit with the yellow tape wrapped around the end for? Can it be removed?
2) The pipe that runs along the floor from left to right is the waste from the bath and sink. Ever since I moved in, the bath has been slow to drain, and we've think it's because the water runs uphill where it bends round to go into the soil pipe.
Can this be altered so the pipe goes straight into the soil pipe, or is the uphill bend needed to stop smells?
Here I go again on my own....
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Comments
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The pipe with the yellow tape on it appears to be an old overflow pipe, although I'm open to correction. If you are not planning to put the new overflow into it then it isn't needed.
An uphill bend isn't needed to stop smells. That is what the trap is for under your sink and bath. The water in the trap stops smells coming back up the plug hole.
So where does your pan actually discharge to now?Eat vegetables and fear no creditors, rather than eat duck and hide.0 -
Busy refitting our bathroom. In a previous life, it used to be a seperate toilet and bathroom, but the previous owner knocked it all into one big room. The toilet stuck out a bit, as in this picture:
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v196/becles/before2.jpg
It was just a stud wall behind the toilet, so we decided to remove that and move the toilet back to make the room bigger. The soil pipe is tucked in the corner, so we knew we would have to box round that.
However we've got a problem with the pipework. Here's another pic:
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v196/becles/pipes.jpg
1) What is the bit with the yellow tape wrapped around the end for? Can it be removed?
2) The pipe that runs along the floor from left to right is the waste from the bath and sink. Ever since I moved in, the bath has been slow to drain, and we've think it's because the water runs uphill where it bends round to go into the soil pipe.
Can this be altered so the pipe goes straight into the soil pipe, or is the uphill bend needed to stop smells?
The yellow stuff is just a temporary cap someone has put on. You can take the white pipe out & permanently seal the soil pipe.
Apart from the trap a drainage pipe should always run downhill at 18mm -40mm per metre depending on what the pipe is for.Not Again0 -
The pipe with the yellow tape on it appears to be an old overflow pipe, although I'm open to correction.
Its either a 32mm or 40mm drainage pipe.
If it was an overflow it was installed by a someone who didn't know what they where doing.
But judging by the below drainage running up hill around a half a dozen elbows you could be right....
Anyways I think its the overflow pipe coming straight out of the external wall.
What is in the room the other side of the tiled wall next to the soil pipe?Not Again0 -
However we've got a problem with the pipework. Here's another pic:1) What is the bit with the yellow tape wrapped around the end for? Can it be removed?2) The pipe that runs along the floor from left to right is the waste from the bath and sink. Ever since I moved in, the bath has been slow to drain, and we've think it's because the water runs uphill where it bends round to go into the soil pipe.
Can this be altered so the pipe goes straight into the soil pipe, or is the uphill bend needed to stop smells?
CheersThe difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has it's limits. - Einstein0 -
Yes there is another bathroom on the right hand side, with a toilet flowing into the pipe that disappears off to the right through the wall.
The previous owners seemed to bodge a lot of jobs, so we don't have any faith in things we findHere I go again on my own....0 -
Yes there is another bathroom on the right hand side, with a toilet flowing into the pipe that disappears off to the right through the wall.
The previous owners seemed to bodge a lot of jobs, so we don't have any faith in things we find
To be fair there is a little sense to his thought its just the application that's poor.Not Again0 -
Yes there is another bathroom on the right hand side, with a toilet flowing into the pipe that disappears off to the right through the wall.
The previous owners seemed to bodge a lot of jobs, so we don't have any faith in things we find
Am I correct about the soil pipe for the loo in the picture?
CheersThe difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has it's limits. - Einstein0 -
We are pretty certain it goes vertical and joins up below, but we haven't removed the pan or the floorboards yet and can't see for definite yet.
Does that mean the loo won't go back against the wall now and we have to build it back up?Here I go again on my own....0 -
We are pretty certain it goes vertical and joins up below, but we haven't removed the pan or the floorboards yet and can't see for definite yet.Does that mean the loo won't go back against the wall now and we have to build it back up?
Its plain that they didn't think about loo distance to wall when they bult the main box the first time round. If they'd brought it far enough forward (ie an extra couple of inches) and there would have been no need for the latter add-on!
CheersThe difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has it's limits. - Einstein0 -
Thanks so much for the help. I'll get hubby to read the thread tomorrow.
We were orginally just going to tile over what was there and not move anything, and put the new toilet in the same place.
However we were not confident about changing the radiator for a towel radiator as the pipework for that needed altering so we paid for someone to come in and do that.
He asked why the toilet stuck out so I explained about it being two seperate rooms and the extension and said the previous owner did all that work. He said it would be best to remove the wall as there would be nothing behind it and it would be a simple job to move the loo back to the breeze block wall.
We got a shock when we started taking the wall down and discovered the soil stack so had to change plans to box that in. There was a load of rubble down the hole on top of the pipes, so we didn't actually see the pipes in the picture until all the wall was gone and the rubble removed.
I wish I hadn't listened to the radiator man nowHere I go again on my own....0
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