Hi
Just after a little advice before cracking on......
Is there any way of telling whether a joint on a 110mm soil pipe is push fit or solvent weld just by looking at it ?
The plastic pipework is in a late 60's house with the T to the WC labelled as 'OSMA 4" / 110mm'.
I have attached a couple of pictures below:
Toilet connection to 110mm OSMA soil pipe.
110mm pipe goes through side wall of toilet (single skin block) - plastered flush to pipe !
Into soil stack in adjacent bathroom (1st floor).
Upper joint in stack between pipe and 90 degree T in from WC side
Lower joint just visible at floorboard level (joist below board appears to butt up tight to stack pipe).
I am actually looking to remove the WC and relocate it into the adjacent bathroom to the left of the soil pipe. Looking at it it seems that:
Some plaster / wall will have to be removed to extracate the existing t jucnction (There are not roof timbers resting on the wall between the wc and bathroom - subject to getting a professional opinion I am hoping to remove this wall as part of refitting the bathroom - Shower cubicle to be installed in old WC space).
Having looked at the roof the soil pipe exits the roof and has some lead flashing making this juction weatherproof. Is there a risk that this junction gets compromised if trying to separate the push filttings (if indeed they are).
Cant budge any joints at the moment although this is primarily due to being fixed through walls etc. I am thinking of removing the WC so that I can try its 110mm pipe fitting (photo 1) to see if that separates.
Any thoughts or pearls of wisdom would be appreciated.
Thanks
Emilian
Just after a little advice before cracking on......
Is there any way of telling whether a joint on a 110mm soil pipe is push fit or solvent weld just by looking at it ?
The plastic pipework is in a late 60's house with the T to the WC labelled as 'OSMA 4" / 110mm'.
I have attached a couple of pictures below:
Toilet connection to 110mm OSMA soil pipe.
110mm pipe goes through side wall of toilet (single skin block) - plastered flush to pipe !
Into soil stack in adjacent bathroom (1st floor).
Upper joint in stack between pipe and 90 degree T in from WC side
Lower joint just visible at floorboard level (joist below board appears to butt up tight to stack pipe).
I am actually looking to remove the WC and relocate it into the adjacent bathroom to the left of the soil pipe. Looking at it it seems that:
Some plaster / wall will have to be removed to extracate the existing t jucnction (There are not roof timbers resting on the wall between the wc and bathroom - subject to getting a professional opinion I am hoping to remove this wall as part of refitting the bathroom - Shower cubicle to be installed in old WC space).
Having looked at the roof the soil pipe exits the roof and has some lead flashing making this juction weatherproof. Is there a risk that this junction gets compromised if trying to separate the push filttings (if indeed they are).
Cant budge any joints at the moment although this is primarily due to being fixed through walls etc. I am thinking of removing the WC so that I can try its 110mm pipe fitting (photo 1) to see if that separates.
Any thoughts or pearls of wisdom would be appreciated.
Thanks
Emilian