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Stephen Jones December 5th 03 01:06 PM

Replacing a WC
 
I am in the process of doing up my bathroom and am going to replace
the WC. The problem is the WC is cemented into the soil pipe pipe
which is set in concrete in the floor. Do I just chip away the WC
waste and put some sort of plastic insert into the soil pipe as it
comes through the floor to connect the new WC waste to ? How difficult
is this ?
Thanks for any help

Steve Jones

Andy Hall December 5th 03 01:35 PM

Replacing a WC
 
On 5 Dec 2003 05:06:00 -0800, (Stephen Jones)
wrote:

I am in the process of doing up my bathroom and am going to replace
the WC. The problem is the WC is cemented into the soil pipe pipe
which is set in concrete in the floor. Do I just chip away the WC
waste and put some sort of plastic insert into the soil pipe as it
comes through the floor to connect the new WC waste to ? How difficult
is this ?
Thanks for any help

Steve Jones


Basically, yes.

Typically the soil pipe in this scenario is cast iron so you should
try to avoid hitting it directly. The WC waste should break
reasonably easily when hit with a hammer. Then remove the pan out of
the way and carefully chip away any remaining pieces and the cement
from the soil pipe socket. Try to clean up the inside of the socket
to remove any lumps of cement and to provide a reasonably smooth
surface.



There are adaptors available from plumber's merchants or DIY sheds
which have a rubber gasket on the male end with fins. You basically
insert this into the soil pipe socket. Use washing up liquid if
lubrication is needed as a result of the fit being too stiff. It
*may* be necessary to seal with some mastic as well - that all depends
on how smooth the soil pipe is. Some of these adaptors have a
flexible section if you need it.

If this is a ground floor bathroom, then the pipe in the floor may be
an old salt glaze earthenware type. These usually have a wider
diameter socket where the cement is. On runs of this type of pipe
underground these were used to fit the pipes together with a wrapping
of sacking and grease to locate and seal the connection, followed by
mortar to finish the job.
If salt glaze is what you have, be a bit careful with the hammer
because it does crack rather easily. It doesn't matter too much if
the collar breaks away a bit because the adaptor is going to fit into
the main bore of the pipe anyway. You want to try to avoid breaking
a section of the main bore of the pipe away if you can.








..andy

To email, substitute .nospam with .gl

BillR December 5th 03 01:46 PM

Replacing a WC
 
Stephen Jones wrote:
I am in the process of doing up my bathroom and am going to replace
the WC. The problem is the WC is cemented into the soil pipe pipe
which is set in concrete in the floor. Do I just chip away the WC
waste and put some sort of plastic insert into the soil pipe as it
comes through the floor to connect the new WC waste to ? How difficult
is this ?
Thanks for any help

Steve Jones


It seems to be usual to cut the soil pipe more or less flush with the floor
and use a 90 degree plastic connector. Plumbers used to use a special cutter
tool but a small angle grinder works.
You may need to use a "space saver" 90 bend connector to get the pan nearer
to the wall.
Oh, and I found those fancy pans, with the sides that hide the pan's U bend,
don't fit in this situation.



Stephen Jones December 9th 03 12:45 PM

Replacing a WC
 
"BillR" wrote in message ...
Stephen Jones wrote:
I am in the process of doing up my bathroom and am going to replace
the WC. The problem is the WC is cemented into the soil pipe pipe
which is set in concrete in the floor. Do I just chip away the WC
waste and put some sort of plastic insert into the soil pipe as it
comes through the floor to connect the new WC waste to ? How difficult
is this ?
Thanks for any help

Steve Jones


It seems to be usual to cut the soil pipe more or less flush with the floor
and use a 90 degree plastic connector. Plumbers used to use a special cutter
tool but a small angle grinder works.
You may need to use a "space saver" 90 bend connector to get the pan nearer
to the wall.
Oh, and I found those fancy pans, with the sides that hide the pan's U bend,
don't fit in this situation.



The soil pipe as it comes through the floor is terra cota etc. Its a
1955 bungalow. Sould I cut it of at floor level using grinder or knock
out old wc and chip away the cement that held it in place in the terra
cota pipe taking care not to damage it

Thanks

Steve


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