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  • 4 weeks later...

Just doing some bathroom planning so this thread is really helpful.  We were thinking of the 112cm Geberit Duofix frame but we have two bathrooms next to each other and the toilets are currently back to back (design stage only).  This looks like it could cause a problem?  We could make a thicker internal wall between the two rooms to fit the two frames in back to back (?) but what about the soil pipes?  Even for a single Geberit frame with a toilet on an internal wall what width wall is needed to fit the bend of the soil pipe within the wall?  The frame seems to be 12cm wide but it looks like the soil pipe could extend wider than that?  Anyone got one fitted who can advise?

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30 minutes ago, Weebles said:

Just doing some bathroom planning so this thread is really helpful.  We were thinking of the 112cm Geberit Duofix frame but we have two bathrooms next to each other and the toilets are currently back to back (design stage only).  This looks like it could cause a problem?  We could make a thicker internal wall between the two rooms to fit the two frames in back to back (?) but what about the soil pipes?  Even for a single Geberit frame with a toilet on an internal wall what width wall is needed to fit the bend of the soil pipe within the wall?  The frame seems to be 12cm wide but it looks like the soil pipe could extend wider than that?  Anyone got one fitted who can advise?

 

This is mine:

 

20170719_224620

 

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At a push the soil pipe will fit into about 150mm. 

 

 

 

The catalog shows the min/max of 90-135mm for the centreline of the soilpipe. If you add 55mm onto that then you’re at 145mm or about 25mm thicker than the cistern itself. 

 

https://catalog.geberit.com/public/product.aspx?cat=GB_GB-en_1&ch=CH3_100902&p=PRO_100833

8E368935-F065-419C-B69B-3C770A1E551F.thumb.jpeg.beb86794093f7d65d8d7d0872581f6fa.jpeg

 

If you are putting them back to back you may struggle with soil pipe separation to meet building regs. 

 

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12 minutes ago, Weebles said:

Have you sculpted that soil pipe into your Celotex there?

 

The pipe was put in and expanding foam squirted around and flushed off. I had to add 9mm ply to the face of the studs to allow for the dia of the 110mm pipe collar.

 

I really don't know where to begin...you needed to have been here from the start of the journey...

 

It's a long story...ask anyone here! :)

 

Depending how bored you are:

 

https://flic.kr/s/aHsk23FYzd

 

 

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Thanks @PeterW that drawing has made everything alot clearer.  Are you referring to building regs for soil pipes joining the main stack?  I can't see anything referring to two soil pipes running next to each other i.e. before they join the stack....but then I haven't read the whole lot just yet.....

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9 hours ago, PeterW said:

At a push the soil pipe will fit into about 150mm. 

 

 

 

The catalog shows the min/max of 90-135mm for the centreline of the soilpipe. If you add 55mm onto that then you’re at 145mm or about 25mm thicker than the cistern itself. 

 

https://catalog.geberit.com/public/product.aspx?cat=GB_GB-en_1&ch=CH3_100902&p=PRO_100833

8E368935-F065-419C-B69B-3C770A1E551F.thumb.jpeg.beb86794093f7d65d8d7d0872581f6fa.jpeg

 

If you are putting them back to back you may struggle with soil pipe separation to meet building regs. 

 

 

We had this challenge on the kids bathrooms which are back to back. Plumbers concern was that if done incorrectly, flushing one loo would cause splash back in the other. In the end we needed to ensure adequate separation of the individual wastes (and therefore the loos) to ensure they both had a decent drop before coming together in a Y - part of the issue was the depth of the wall between them. Meant we needed to build out a small partition in one of the bathrooms.

 

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14 minutes ago, Bitpipe said:

 

We had this challenge on the kids bathrooms which are back to back. Plumbers concern was that if done incorrectly, flushing one loo would cause splash back in the other. In the end we needed to ensure adequate separation of the individual wastes (and therefore the loos) to ensure they both had a decent drop before coming together in a Y - part of the issue was the depth of the wall between them. Meant we needed to build out a small partition in one of the bathrooms.

 

To get 'splashback' out of an adjacent WC from another would be something I've never seen. I've fitted multiple WC's in nightclubs and hotels etc and they've been less than a metre apart in some instances. If the soils can fall vertically before any horizontal invert then the 'issue' is instantly removed. If you plan a T in between two rear exiting WCs which are DIRECTLY opposite each other then the worst you'd get is the water level in one being noticeably moved by flushing the other. 'Debris' would likely become apparent in the lesser used one over time, but I doubt anyone would ever T two together in such a way anyhoo as its not common practice. 

Offest the two WCs by 300mm or so and you'll be able to couple up to the same T using an 'intersection branch'  and the issue is done with there and then. 

One of these or one of these for eg, with the two WCs existing horizontally left and right into the latter as the first choice. 

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We have back to backed our kids en-suites to get over the issue of 2 toilets flushing through horizontally opposite wastes and will employ the layout shown below.  These are Gerbrit Duofix frames with a 100mm stud wall between.  The soil stack goes vertically down at the indicated point which may be your problem.

image.png.cab87b99f17ecf3686f7a59623d7286c.png

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A couple more shots of mine albeit a single pan. More to get an idea of the convoluted route I went to bring the soil run within the stud wall depth. My stud wall is odd in that to square the room off the studs vary in depth from 95mm where the soil exits the wall to 150mm down by the Geberit frame. I was sort of lucky as the frame sits over where was an old door way, now blocked up but with the face of the blocks recessed by about 2" from the original wall:

 

20170225_120054

 

20170225_120017

 

You can see here it was all looking good until I had to account for the collar thickness on the fittings. If you use push fit then the distance from centreline will be in excess of 55mm.

 

To gain mm I went solvent weld. (Measure, dry fit & mark, double check before you glue - not for the faint-hearted but I'd do it again). Even with solvent weld the horizontal brown was just that bit too far out past the stud line and immovable where it exited through the wall. Hence the 9mm packing pieces added above:

 

20170128_163003

 

20170201_154524

 

So now my moisture resistant plasterboard & Aquapanel for the wet room corner will "sail" over the soil pipe and be unsupported there - must remember NOT to screw there! :) 

 

20170730_101136

 

20170815_164109

 

Edited by Onoff
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31 minutes ago, Nickfromwales said:

To get 'splashback' out of an adjacent WC from another would be something I've never seen.

I've used the Floplast double branch soil pipe you suggested for back to back connection of two toilets without any problem. I was told it wouldn't work but the BCO was happy because it was manufactured for that purpose.

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1 hour ago, PeterStarck said:

I've used the Floplast double branch soil pipe you suggested for back to back connection of two toilets without any problem. I was told it wouldn't work but the BCO was happy because it was manufactured for that purpose.

The BCO will usually accept a demonstration of proper / reliable function  TBH. The proof is in the pudding. 

If I doubt they'll be happy initially with one of my 'get out of jail card' solutions, I cobble it all together and call the BCO out. 

They cant say it wont work when they can see it working ;) and they get the final say. 

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23 minutes ago, Temp said:

When you push the WC up against the wall it tends to push the flush pipe back into the wall. I'd recommend a brace behind the flush pipe to prevent this. Likewise the soil pipe.

 

You'd have trouble pushing these Geberit brackets off once clipped in! A bit of silicone spray on the pipe before it goes in etc.

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46 minutes ago, Temp said:

When you push the WC up against the wall it tends to push the flush pipe back into the wall. I'd recommend a brace behind the flush pipe to prevent this. Likewise the soil pipe.

Negatory ;).

The full frames have the cistern outlet moulded as a solid section of the cistern which faces forward. It's clipped to the metal frame and doesn't move a mm. 

 

The black soil bend is shown loose here, but gets locked into position by a horseshoe clip and doesn't budge. 

image.thumb.jpg.6f885031e1eec04017c95341b080d44a.jpg

 

What you get left after boarding / tiling. The geberit supplied pan connector pushes into the larger hole, cut to length to suit, and likewise with the supplied flush pipe. Plenty of silicone grease on the ends and the pan slips onto them like a hand in a glove.  

image.thumb.jpg.b7a78ec70d33001eb3b1c17648a2b65e.jpg

 

Bingo. 

image.thumb.jpg.af39d224181ed63f38ac007622825403.jpg

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Infamy! :)

 

EDIT: On my attempt the black goes into the grey and is push fit. Then it's grey to grey solvent weld. to get the "kick". Solvent weld fittings are just that bit more compact. The grey to brown joint, (where I didn't want a collar) caused me a few sleepless nights with questions over whether brown soil will in fact solvent weld to grey. The brown is more "plasticky" if that's a word, Thought they're all pvc thay have slightly different BS numbers. With hindsight I'd have done the long length in grey or black. Also, ref different makes of fitting, some joints can feel a bit loose. I got a tube of pvc gap filling cement. It's a bit thicker than the stuff comes in a tin with a brush. Shop around as it's pricey if you do need some:

 

 http://www.plasticdrainage.co.uk/clear-solvent-cement-gap-filler-7965.html?gclid=EAIaIQobChMI-ZOMuOii1wIVg7vtCh35VwHJEAQYAyABEgIimvD_BwE#fo_c=1765&fo_k=7ae12d9e5b724501290300d41070b52c&fo_s=gplauk

Edited by Onoff
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  • 6 years later...

Just posting this here for future reference when anyone is looking at back-to-back WC issues and the Geberit frames. There is a Geberit pan connector specifically for this situation. I found it when researching the back-to-back "challenge"...

 

image.thumb.png.7454cd2ab5c5ab00136bd272fab89f80.png

 

image.thumb.png.0fb605696b8622db5270144912d3dabd.png

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