Hi all,
I've fitted a new Belfast style kitchen sink over the weekend and in doing so have found that the waste pipe coming from the wall is roughly 1/2 inch to high to go into the P trap. Has anyone had a similar issue? I've managed to make the P trap connector watertight by using parts which don't actually fit together correctly with a considerable amount of silicon seal.
Has anyone made changes to there waste pipes, i.e. remove a couple of joints? I have attached a picture which shows the sink fitting and the waste pipe coming from the wall. I believe I could do with removing a couple of sections of the solvent welded waste pipe so that it's a couple of inches lower and would then allow me to fit a P trap without the current make shift joint. The challenge is I can't really see that I could cut the pipe as there are no straight sections for me to make a good joint onto. The wastepipe disappears into the wall and then is only see again outside where it joints the stack pipe.
Any advice appreciated...
Regards,
Steven.
I've fitted a new Belfast style kitchen sink over the weekend and in doing so have found that the waste pipe coming from the wall is roughly 1/2 inch to high to go into the P trap. Has anyone had a similar issue? I've managed to make the P trap connector watertight by using parts which don't actually fit together correctly with a considerable amount of silicon seal.
Has anyone made changes to there waste pipes, i.e. remove a couple of joints? I have attached a picture which shows the sink fitting and the waste pipe coming from the wall. I believe I could do with removing a couple of sections of the solvent welded waste pipe so that it's a couple of inches lower and would then allow me to fit a P trap without the current make shift joint. The challenge is I can't really see that I could cut the pipe as there are no straight sections for me to make a good joint onto. The wastepipe disappears into the wall and then is only see again outside where it joints the stack pipe.
Any advice appreciated...
Regards,
Steven.