Just an insight and a few questions for the good folks here!
Wanting to fit an an outdoor tap for use with a hose for watering the garden, washing the car etc.
1) What is the difference between a 1/2" and a 3/4" tap? Is it the thread on the flow end of the tap or the external part of the tap that you can fit an adapter and hose? I realise that you get the same with bathroom taps (basin and bath) but wanted to know so I buy the correct size.
2) I am thinking of tee-ing into the toilet cistern feed as there is already a hole in the wall at this point, and it just makes things easier for me. Failing that, I can always drill another hole, but the wall is concrete with an outer brick skin, so it will take some time.
So, my plan is: Tee in at the cistern feed, add a flexi hose with an isolation valve and a double check NR valve, attach to the 15mm pipe that goes through the wall, through a 22mm hard plastic sleeve that is already in place through the wall, attach the backplate to the wall, attach outdoor tap.
The reason I was thinking of tee-ing into the cistern feed is that the cold water pipe is very low and is obstructed by tiles, so it makes easy access a pain.
All existing pipework is 15mm. Pre 1940's building.
Anything else I need to know or do, folks?
Many thanks.
Wanting to fit an an outdoor tap for use with a hose for watering the garden, washing the car etc.
1) What is the difference between a 1/2" and a 3/4" tap? Is it the thread on the flow end of the tap or the external part of the tap that you can fit an adapter and hose? I realise that you get the same with bathroom taps (basin and bath) but wanted to know so I buy the correct size.
2) I am thinking of tee-ing into the toilet cistern feed as there is already a hole in the wall at this point, and it just makes things easier for me. Failing that, I can always drill another hole, but the wall is concrete with an outer brick skin, so it will take some time.
So, my plan is: Tee in at the cistern feed, add a flexi hose with an isolation valve and a double check NR valve, attach to the 15mm pipe that goes through the wall, through a 22mm hard plastic sleeve that is already in place through the wall, attach the backplate to the wall, attach outdoor tap.
The reason I was thinking of tee-ing into the cistern feed is that the cold water pipe is very low and is obstructed by tiles, so it makes easy access a pain.
All existing pipework is 15mm. Pre 1940's building.
Anything else I need to know or do, folks?
Many thanks.