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[Misc] Plumbing advice?



Balders

Well-known member
Aug 19, 2013
328
Quick question - was in the loft this morning and noticed a slow steady drip coming from the Header Tank. Ran the hot water in the bathroom for 30 secs and back in the loft the Header Tank was filling (as it should?) and then when it stopped, the slow steady drip appeared again. Nothing coming out of the overflow - is the ball valve on the way out or is this normal?
 




Mr Bridger

Sound of the suburbs
Feb 25, 2013
4,753
Earth
If you’ve got gravity fed cold supply to your toilets and you think it may be them, the best way to check to see if they are overflowing internally is put a piece of toilet paper on the back of the pan just above the water line. If that gets wet, then that’s your leak.
If your cold’s gravity fed you should have a couple of gate valves in the airing cupboard on 22mm feed? The hot will go into the bottom of the cylinder, the cold should go straight into the floor? You could try isolating one of these to see if the valve stops, but be careful. If the gate valve is hard to turn don’t bother as it might snap off and you one get it back open without calling in a plumber.
Alternatively, in the actual tank in the loft you could plug one of the outlets in the bottom of the tank if you can work out what feeds the hot or cold and see if that stops the valve dripping.
Are you sure you haven’t got pipework in the floor downstairs?
 




Balders

Well-known member
Aug 19, 2013
328
If you’ve got gravity fed cold supply to your toilets and you think it may be them, the best way to check to see if they are overflowing internally is put a piece of toilet paper on the back of the pan just above the water line. If that gets wet, then that’s your leak.
If your cold’s gravity fed you should have a couple of gate valves in the airing cupboard on 22mm feed? The hot will go into the bottom of the cylinder, the cold should go straight into the floor? You could try isolating one of these to see if the valve stops, but be careful. If the gate valve is hard to turn don’t bother as it might snap off and you one get it back open without calling in a plumber.
Alternatively, in the actual tank in the loft you could plug one of the outlets in the bottom of the tank if you can work out what feeds the hot or cold and see if that stops the valve dripping.
Are you sure you haven’t got pipework in the floor downstairs?
When we had the kitchen replaced the only feed coming out of the floor was the mains water feed. We moved the sink and all associated plumbing to another wall (we opened up a separate Kitchen and Dining Room by removing the internal wall and moving the back door to accommodated the new sink location!)
We have 2 radiators downstairs (in our modest two up, two down) and both have the feed coming from upstairs as they are visible down the corners of the walls....
 


Balders

Well-known member
Aug 19, 2013
328
If you’ve got gravity fed cold supply to your toilets and you think it may be them, the best way to check to see if they are overflowing internally is put a piece of toilet paper on the back of the pan just above the water line. If that gets wet, then that’s your leak.
If your cold’s gravity fed you should have a couple of gate valves in the airing cupboard on 22mm feed? The hot will go into the bottom of the cylinder, the cold should go straight into the floor? You could try isolating one of these to see if the valve stops, but be careful. If the gate valve is hard to turn don’t bother as it might snap off and you one get it back open without calling in a plumber.
Alternatively, in the actual tank in the loft you could plug one of the outlets in the bottom of the tank if you can work out what feeds the hot or cold and see if that stops the valve dripping.
Are you sure you haven’t got pipework in the floor downstairs?
That was after the plumbing for the Washing Machine and Dishwasher were removed!
 

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BN9 BHA

DOCKERS
NSC Patron
Jul 14, 2013
22,660
Newhaven
Who still lugs around 110v transformers?
:bigwave:
I’ve got a 110v jigsaw that I’ve had for years, I only use it when I’ve got to change a kitchen sink and the worktop needs cutting slightly.
Also got a 110v circular saw but haven’t used it for ages since I got a decent multi tool.
I keep looking at cordless DeWalt jigsaws and definitely would buy if I was using a jigsaw every day or even every week.
 


Justice

Dangerous Idiot
Jun 21, 2012
20,653
Born In Shoreham
:bigwave:
I’ve got a 110v jigsaw that I’ve had for years, I only use it when I’ve got to change a kitchen sink and the worktop needs cutting slightly.
Also got a 110v circular saw but haven’t used it for ages since I got a decent multi tool.
I keep looking at cordless DeWalt jigsaws and definitely would buy if I was using a jigsaw every day or even every week.
Went all 18v ages ago, the only power drill is my core drill.
The Dewalt 18v jig is a handy bit of kit I use it quite often superb at cutting SWA cable.
 


BN9 BHA

DOCKERS
NSC Patron
Jul 14, 2013
22,660
Newhaven
Went all 18v ages ago, the only power drill is my core drill.
The Dewalt 18v jig is a handy bit of kit I use it quite often superb at cutting SWA cable.
When the jigsaw packs up or I get fed up with the transformer I will get one, it’s the small type transformer so not too heavy.
I’ve also got a 240v core drill.
 


Mr Bridger

Sound of the suburbs
Feb 25, 2013
4,753
Earth
:bigwave:
I’ve got a 110v jigsaw that I’ve had for years, I only use it when I’ve got to change a kitchen sink and the worktop needs cutting slightly.
Also got a 110v circular saw but haven’t used it for ages since I got a decent multi tool.
I keep looking at cordless DeWalt jigsaws and definitely would buy if I was using a jigsaw every day or even every week.
Is it 110v multi tool ???
 








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