Oxbow16 Posted 23 hours ago Posted 23 hours ago (edited) Hi all Sorry for the long title but thought best to bung all these general plumbing questions together. I'll be fitting a new kitchen sink soon and am unsure on the following... 1. Compression vs Push Fit for outside? I know solvent weld is the preferred and professional choice, but I'd really like to be able to dismantle every so often and clean out the pipes... 2. Which pipe for outside? If I'm using push fit then I guess the answer is obvious! but if using compression I've read I can use either type of pipe. Which stands up best to the elements? And do both types need painting (have read various answers on that question)? 3. Do I need an AAV valve? I'm totally confused as to when they are/aren't needed. For context, the kitchen sink is not connected to any other wastes. And it is open ended , i.e. the open end of the pipe sits just inside the drain cover grate. EDIT - I should add. There is no AAV in the existing set up. However, in case it matters, I will be going from a sink and a half to a single sink, and I'll be adding a dishwasher where does was none before. Any help would be much appreciated. Thanks for reading Edited 23 hours ago by Oxbow16
Nickfromwales Posted 21 hours ago Posted 21 hours ago Use solvent weld and fit a couple of T’s and cleaning eyes for routine ‘cleaning out of gunk’. Push fit is shart, compression bulky and ugly as feck, sorry! As for AAV’s: You only need one if the discharging water can occupy suffice pipe area on its way down / out to create a vacuum in its wake. That’s the main culprit for slurping and *gurgling wastes. If this is a ground floor kitchen discharging into a drain outside, it’ll defo not need an AAV. *Gurgling wastes at the kitchen sink are caused by those horrid combination sink traps where the appliance connects via a stubby spur. This means that the water discharges between the sink plug hole and the trap, so you get to hear every last slurp…. PLEASE, T off the waste pipe and install a washing machine trap, and connect the appliance(s) via one of those: As your pipe exits horizontally to outdoors you have a T instead of a bend, with a cleaning eye: This allows you to ‘rod’ into the sink and down to the outdoor drain. ”Minted lamb, sir”. 👌 2
Oxbow16 Posted 9 hours ago Author Posted 9 hours ago Thanks Nick, that's all very helpful indeed. I hadn't even thought of the dishwasher slurps and noises that would be heard using a "stubby" pre-trap connection, so I'm pleased you pointed that out. I'm good with the idea of using a standpipe for the dishwasher, but I'm confused as to how and where the sink waste and standpipe would connect, especially given their different heights. Are you able to explain please? Also, what height does the standpipe need to be relative to the appliance and/or sink? is there a minimum or maximum? Thanks again
Temp Posted 5 minutes ago Posted 5 minutes ago 20 hours ago, Nickfromwales said: Use solvent weld and fit a couple of T’s and cleaning eyes for routine ‘cleaning out of gunk’. This. You can get bends with access.. or make a bigger access out of a Tee and screw cap.. and
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