-
Posts
30336 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
297
Everything posted by Nickfromwales
-
Shower Waste Sealing to Tray
Nickfromwales replied to Barney12's topic in Bathrooms, Ensuites & Wetrooms
CT1 all the way. Silicone is not a very good product for this imo, and can skin over and lose adhesion from the underside of the tray. -
A "what fitting" plumbing question
Nickfromwales replied to ProDave's topic in Bathrooms, Ensuites & Wetrooms
Another heathen putting speed fit into compression. Two words id use for anyone doing that on one of my jobs.................."your sacked" ! -
A "what fitting" plumbing question
Nickfromwales replied to ProDave's topic in Bathrooms, Ensuites & Wetrooms
Thats what I always use, and im pretty sure that ive never seen a tapered one. I often turn the shower arm thread all the way into this to start the first fix plumbing, and they spin in finger tight without any force, not how it would be with a tapered fitting Use an end feed one instead of compression and your bombproof. -
The chamber with the connections branching off in the wrong direction
-
Pictures ?
-
+1. Just remember not to exceed the REN ( ringer equivalent number ) of 4. Each SLT ( single line telephone ) typically has a REN of 1, so no more than 4 phones. If more are necessary, you can get REN boosters, but most folk will have one base station and a bunch of DECT cordless phones registered to that base station. Have you tried connecting a cordless phone to the socket there and then checking for DECT range throughout the house ? Id do that first and see if you need a remote phone elsewhere. Edit : DECT = Digital Enhanced Cordless Telephony aka signal jumping to use the best signal during the calls.
-
Hi Steve. Welcome to 'the' forum. That lot should keep you busy .
-
Take a seat Steve, someone will be along shortly
-
Un-level bathroom floor
Nickfromwales replied to Mr-Mechnic's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
How it looks infilled with 3x2". Cuts around the waste to allow a bit of movement when connecting to the tray. Troughing out for pipework / cables etc. Happy days. Plenty of acoustic roll so folk downstairs can't hear the shower or tall people peeing . End result. Not a wetroom as this was a very small room. But all tanked and membraned so as good as. Nice level entry shower, compared to the 160mm step to get into the old one -
Un-level bathroom floor
Nickfromwales replied to Mr-Mechnic's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
If it wasn't a wet room you could use lollipop sticks tbh, but a wet room is a different beast altogether. -
Any unit that has motors or fans should have flexis fitted to combat the "transmission of vibration" to rigid or fixed pipework. Deffo go for the flexis.
-
Un-level bathroom floor
Nickfromwales replied to Mr-Mechnic's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
If I'm reading this correctly then the middle of the room is the issue. What I've done previously, so as not to raise the floor level at the door, is to lift all the floorboards and get the room back to the exposed joists. I then fitted full lengths of 3x2" on the inside face of each joist, as parallel ( sister joist ) rails, set to the height of the lowest joist -18mm. A laser is your friend here for sure, but you can use a level and get good results ( like the good old days ). So say the lowest point is your doorway. You measure down 18mm from the top of the joist, and clamp a full length of 3x2" accordingly, level it as required making sure your start point stays exactly where it should be. Double check as this will dictate the rest of the floor level ! Screw that to the joist using 10x3's and put plenty in. Gluing will help too if you can work quickly enough. Cut 2 pieces of 3x2" narrow enough to fit between the joists. Clamp another full length of 3x2" opposite the first one and repeat with levelling. Sit the off cut of 3x2" from the first rail onto the next and then sit your 600mm level onto that. That'll allow you to make sure that each rail on each joist is level with the previous one. The purpose of the 3x2" off-cuts is to allow you to bridge over the joists when you get to the middle of the room, where you should find the joists higher than the rails plus 18mm ply. Repeat until you've railed the whole room, then get a piece of 18mm ply on its side sat on the rails, to use as a guide for trimming the joist tops down to suit with an electric plane. Once you've got level rails throughout, and they're 18mm lower than the lowest point in the room, you can then rip 18mm plywood down to i film inbetween the joists. Once that's done, ( plumbing and tray etc omitted at this point as it's a separate subject ), you can glue and screw 6mm plywood in full sheets over the top of the lot. Loads of PVA spread around with a floor layers comb ( 3mm notch ) and 1"x8's BZP screws at 120mm centres to fix the ply down nice and tight. By the time you tile, and posibly UTH ( under tile heating ) wire too, you'll not have pushed very far past the existing door level. You can plane the joist tops down after the plywood goes down, up to you. My 2 cents. PS if the joists are at all loose or excessive movement is detected, alter the 18mm dinension to 38mm and I fill with 3x2" on flat instead of the ply. You can park a car on that -
Off cut of 15mm pushfit pipe will do just not as easy to get a tight bend.
- 13 replies
-
- eufh
- sensor position
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Un-level bathroom floor
Nickfromwales replied to Mr-Mechnic's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
What size are the joists ? -
With great power comes.......great fear.
- 13 replies
-
- eufh
- sensor position
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Ok, you got me on a technicality. BUT....you lose the point anyhoo because you should have said so in that post . Joe public could have easily read that as staple the wire down, but don't beat yourself up over it, allow me to do it for you instead
- 13 replies
-
- 1
-
-
- eufh
- sensor position
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Top idea. The bedrooms could have French doors too then.
-
+1 and the fact that once their out to sea, they're there to stay. Quite distressing to hear on that programme how huge an impact something like that is causing.
-
You can, but I find a much stiffer mix of standard ( eg not rapid ) set tile adhesive holds the dog ears of the UTH wire / mat down whereas with SLC you have to be crazy careful not to allow any single part of mat / wire lift. Using staples would instantly void most warranties. .
- 13 replies
-
- eufh
- sensor position
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
How much is a water connection?
Nickfromwales replied to Construction Channel's topic in General Plumbing
That's very good of you . -
How much is a water connection?
Nickfromwales replied to Construction Channel's topic in General Plumbing
Why not rent them a water connection from your borehole Ch-Chinnnnnnnnng £££ -
Yup, and you can still get a nice rainfall head and hose / handset combos with bar mixers too.
-
Just buy another tower shower and you'll need to do no such thing. Prob best to try and strip and service that one before writing it off.
-
Yup. Ask him to install a section of 150mm soil pipe as a duct and build over it with lintels as Dave says. Then do it whenever your ready. . The duct will be big enough to bring other services through too, like water and electric. Get the levels right with a laser or string line, but the bigger duct will give an inch either way for fine tuning.
