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Overflow pipe freezing


Pocster

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1 hour ago, Pocster said:

File upload limit needs increasing ... pic

 

image.png.8a1a23c048eb12d01da25b498c3d187b.png

 

This outlet design will cause probs, IMO.  The horizontal run will cause standing water which will start to freeze from the drip, building up and then block.  Perhaps a case of aesthetics over fitness.  🫢

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Just now, TerryE said:

image.png.8a1a23c048eb12d01da25b498c3d187b.png

 

This outlet design will cause probs, IMO.  The horizontal run will cause standing water which will start to freeze from the drip, building up and then block.  Perhaps a case of aesthetics over fitness.  🫢

Well my friend ! You can just see it in one of the earlier photos that the trunking is straight vertically and horizontally but the actual overflow pipe is slightly on an angle vertically ; meaning that final horizontal part of the pipe has a fall ….

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These sorts of trickle overflow are often turned down into a small stone chip or fine gravel soak-away at ground level, maybe the size of a plant-pot or bucket.  The pipe should be insulated to ground-level.  I am not sure where you live in the UK, but the ground very rarely freeze much more than the top few cm where I live in Northants even in the worst cold snaps, so this approach takes the water away without leaving puddling with can freeze and cause a slip hazard.

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19 minutes ago, TerryE said:

These sorts of trickle overflow are often turned down into a small stone chip or fine gravel soak-away at ground level, maybe the size of a plant-pot or bucket.  The pipe should be insulated to ground-level.  I am not sure where you live in the UK, but the ground very rarely freeze much more than the top few cm where I live in Northants even in the worst cold snaps, so this approach takes the water away without leaving puddling with can freeze and cause a slip hazard.

Not a problem for me . The pipe there is over half a meter above ‘my’ ground . As an underground dwelling there’s a massive void down the entire side of the building . So drainage a non issue .

TBH I like it visible . I did consider taking it further vertically . This way I can see water coming out or potentially freezing .

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Neat job but I agree with Terry. That’s still going to freeze. You would have had to cut it slightly short of the trunking and insulate it to the end of the pipe or, as suggested, continue it into the ground and insulate to ground level. My water pipe comes out of my borehole in free air then down into the ground. I intended backfilling the area around it with earth which would have covered the pipe and stop it from freezing. However to do that required some landscaping so I never got around to it last year. Instead I insulated the pipe as best I could with a very slight bit of pipe left exposed. This  worked until we had several days of -5°C and it eventually froze. This year I backfilled with earth as originally planned and it’s been fine so far. I’ve also fitted a heated cable down the ducting which I’ve not had to use yet. 

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25 minutes ago, Kelvin said:

Neat job but I agree with Terry. That’s still going to freeze. You would have had to cut it slightly short of the trunking and insulate it to the end of the pipe or, as suggested, continue it into the ground and insulate to ground level. My water pipe comes out of my borehole in free air then down into the ground. I intended backfilling the area around it with earth which would have covered the pipe and stop it from freezing. However to do that required some landscaping so I never got around to it last year. Instead I insulated the pipe as best I could with a very slight bit of pipe left exposed. This  worked until we had several days of -5°C and it eventually froze. This year I backfilled with earth as originally planned and it’s been fine so far. I’ve also fitted a heated cable down the ducting which I’ve not had to use yet. 

Are you suggesting just cutting the small non insulated end of the white pipe off ? I.e easiest option ?

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3 hours ago, Kelvin said:

I’ve also fitted a heated cable down the ducting which I’ve not had to use yet. 

 This a good idea if you want to guarantee that it doesn't freeze.  if you lag down to G/L and use a small soak-away as @Kelvin and I suggest then you probably would only need to turn it on for the few days over winter when there is a sustained hard frost.  We don't have this prob since we vent ours internally into the foulwater stack system using a McAlpine In-Line Vertical NRV (these are designed to allow these and similar overflows to  be fed back into the FW system).

 

The nearest we have is that we feed all of our potable water through a Harvey water softener. This is great for cooking and brewed drinks, but we prefer taste of the unsoftened mains for drinking as plain or fizzed water.  I have a garden tap by the back door that taps directly off the riser before the Harvey, so once every day or so I take a big jug outside to refill all of our glass water bottles that we keep in the fridge from the outside tap.  This is a tiny hassle and far less than that of adding an extra unsoftened water tap inside.

 

This outside tap is similarly lagged and does freeze up a few days a year on average.  When this happens,  I just take a kettle outside and defrost it if our need to refill is getting desperate.  Not really workable option for an overflow.

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8 minutes ago, TerryE said:

 This a good idea if you want to guarantee that it doesn't freeze.  if you lag down to G/L and use a small soak-away as @Kelvin and I suggest then you probably would only need to turn it on for the few days over winter when there is a sustained hard frost.  We don't have this prob since we vent ours internally into the foulwater stack system using a McAlpine In-Line Vertical NRV (these are designed to allow these and similar overflows to  be fed back into the FW system).

 

The nearest we have is that we feed all of our potable water through a Harvey water softener. This is great for cooking and brewed drinks, but we prefer taste of the unsoftened mains for drinking as plain or fizzed water.  I have a garden tap by the back door that taps directly off the riser before the Harvey, so once every day or so I take a big jug outside to refill all of our glass water bottles that we keep in the fridge from the outside tap.  This is a tiny hassle and far less than that of adding an extra unsoftened water tap inside.

 

This outside tap is similarly lagged and does freeze up a few days a year on average.  When this happens,  I just take a kettle outside and defrost it if our need to refill is getting desperate.  Not really workable option for an overflow.

I did think of a pipe heater but thought it was overkill for ( as you say ) maybe a few times a year . I’ll just pour hot water over the casing if I need too - possibly next winter 😊

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4 hours ago, Pocster said:

Are you suggesting just cutting the small non insulated end of the white pipe off ? I.e easiest option ?

Yes but leave it for now and see if it does indeed freeze just keep a beady eye on it. 

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