Plastic Pipe To Fit Cast Iron .
My flat ( 100 years old) has the waste from both bath and wash hand
basin going in to a cast iron pipe that runs the length of the building and serves all the flats . ....The waste pipe from the bath is wedged in to the spigot (?) with the aid of turns of Sylglas tape and that works OK and it is hidden anyway . The wash hand basin waste has ,up until now,been fitted in to a reducer similar to this Screwfix one ( but compression type) ,the reducer being held in by a liberal quantity of Plumbers Mait .This is hardly ideal and I am looking for ideas to improve this arrangement . The spigot is about 60mm at the opening but tapers down so the 32mm pipe is a fairly snug fit.......I supose I could just do what I did before and also box it in but maybe someone can come up with a better idea. http://www.screwfix.com/app/sfd/sea/...cd=1&x=12&y=10 Stuart |
Plastic Pipe To Fit Cast Iron .
The wash hand basin waste has ,up until now,been fitted in to a
reducer similar to this Screwfix one ( but compression type) ,the reducer being held in by a liberal quantity of Plumbers Mait. Yes. Do it again, but with 32mm chromed pipe and waste. Looks much nicer! I got mine with an amazingly cheap deal from Homebase. The price of the suite was pretty amazing. What I didn't expect was the quality of the fittings. Decent chrome plated monobloc tap. The chrome waste and pipe, which I expected to be painted plastic, was actually genuinely chromed brass. Christian. |
Plastic Pipe To Fit Cast Iron .
"Stuart" wrote in message ... My flat ( 100 years old) has the waste from both bath and wash hand basin going in to a cast iron pipe that runs the length of the building and serves all the flats . ....The waste pipe from the bath is wedged in to the spigot (?) with the aid of turns of Sylglas tape and that works OK and it is hidden anyway . The wash hand basin waste has ,up until now,been fitted in to a reducer similar to this Screwfix one ( but compression type) ,the reducer being held in by a liberal quantity of Plumbers Mait .This is hardly ideal and I am looking for ideas to improve this arrangement . The spigot is about 60mm at the opening but tapers down so the 32mm pipe is a fairly snug fit.......I supose I could just do what I did before and also box it in but maybe someone can come up with a better idea. I would expect a pipe spigot to have a BSP female thread inside it. British Standard pipe threads are designated by the pipe ID in inches, not the thread OD and about 60mm sounds like 2" BSP; more specifically 2" BSPT (tapered). If so, you should be able to get an adaptor that screws into that, but you won't find one in the DIY sheds. You need to visit a plumbers' supplier for that sort of fitting. Colin Bignell |
Plastic Pipe To Fit Cast Iron .
On Thu, 6 Apr 2006 09:10:13 +0100, "nightjar" nightjar@insert my
surname here.uk.com wrote: "Stuart" wrote in message .. . My flat ( 100 years old) has the waste from both bath and wash hand basin going in to a cast iron pipe that runs the length of the building and serves all the flats . ....The waste pipe from the bath is wedged in to the spigot (?) with the aid of turns of Sylglas tape and that works OK and it is hidden anyway . The wash hand basin waste has ,up until now,been fitted in to a reducer similar to this Screwfix one ( but compression type) ,the reducer being held in by a liberal quantity of Plumbers Mait .This is hardly ideal and I am looking for ideas to improve this arrangement . The spigot is about 60mm at the opening but tapers down so the 32mm pipe is a fairly snug fit.......I supose I could just do what I did before and also box it in but maybe someone can come up with a better idea. I would expect a pipe spigot to have a BSP female thread inside it. British Standard pipe threads are designated by the pipe ID in inches, not the thread OD and about 60mm sounds like 2" BSP; more specifically 2" BSPT (tapered). If so, you should be able to get an adaptor that screws into that, but you won't find one in the DIY sheds. You need to visit a plumbers' supplier for that sort of fitting. Colin Bignell Thx Colin but the "spigot" ( if thats what is called ) doesn't have any thread . Stuart |
Plastic Pipe To Fit Cast Iron .
"Stuart" wrote in message ... .... Thx Colin but the "spigot" ( if thats what is called ) doesn't have any thread . Any chance of a posting a picture somewhere? Colin Bignell |
Plastic Pipe To Fit Cast Iron .
On Fri, 7 Apr 2006 08:36:46 +0100, "nightjar" nightjar@insert my
surname here.uk.com wrote: "Stuart" wrote in message .. . ... Thx Colin but the "spigot" ( if thats what is called ) doesn't have any thread . Any chance of a posting a picture somewhere? Colin Bignell Yup..Will do Stuart |
Plastic Pipe To Fit Cast Iron .
On Fri, 7 Apr 2006 08:36:46 +0100, "nightjar" nightjar@insert my
surname here.uk.com wrote: "Stuart" wrote in message .. . ... Thx Colin but the "spigot" ( if thats what is called ) doesn't have any thread . Any chance of a posting a picture somewhere? Colin Bignell Here you are . http://www.imgbox.co.uk/image.php?image=b1cf6f5ab9.jpg Stuart |
Plastic Pipe To Fit Cast Iron .
"Stuart" wrote in message ... On Fri, 7 Apr 2006 08:36:46 +0100, "nightjar" nightjar@insert my surname here.uk.com wrote: "Stuart" wrote in message . .. ... Thx Colin but the "spigot" ( if thats what is called ) doesn't have any thread . Any chance of a posting a picture somewhere? Colin Bignell Here you are . http://www.imgbox.co.uk/image.php?image=b1cf6f5ab9.jpg Stuart That looks like a pipe socket or even a reducer with a bit of pipe broken off at the exposed end. I suspect that you won't be able to do much better than something similar to the fitting you removed. Colin Bignell |
Plastic Pipe To Fit Cast Iron .
On Fri, 7 Apr 2006 19:04:20 +0100, "nightjar" nightjar@insert my surname
here.uk.com wrote: "Stuart" wrote in message .. . On Fri, 7 Apr 2006 08:36:46 +0100, "nightjar" nightjar@insert my surname here.uk.com wrote: "Stuart" wrote in message ... ... Thx Colin but the "spigot" ( if thats what is called ) doesn't have any thread . Any chance of a posting a picture somewhere? Colin Bignell Here you are . http://www.imgbox.co.uk/image.php?image=b1cf6f5ab9.jpg Stuart That looks like a pipe socket or even a reducer with a bit of pipe broken off at the exposed end. I suspect that you won't be able to do much better than something similar to the fitting you removed. Colin Bignell Peering inside with the aid of a torch Colin it does look as if the front part ( with the jagged edge) has ben inserted in but it's almost certainly ben in since Noah was a wee boy so nae chance of getting it out . I'll just construct a box rund it to make it neater and then fit the plastic pipe that I had in before and seal it up in some fashion ... Thx for your help Stuart |
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