Discuss 1.5inch female connector. Pipe broken off inside. Any way to connect another pipe? in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

Status
Not open for further replies.
Re: 1.5inch female connector. Pipe broken off inside. Any way to connect another pipe

Now using a Fernco in this instants really would be a bodge job (rubber & a jubilee clip) "do I spy the Indians coming though the pass fetch ma horse" I am out of here.!! :cowboy:

Why?

This is an exterior 70cm pipe leading to an open drain? If once it's attached and painted it's basically unnoticeable and undetectable, what's the problem?

More over, if it means not having to rip loads of piping out from inside the house (& I mean loads), from behind kitchen cupboards that are completely in the way, risking introducing even more hassle and work?

But if your wisdom dictates I should personally mess around for a day, or dish out £100+, to end up with nothing more than 'piece of mind', fair enough.


I bet, when an 'adapter' is fitted and painted, no one will ever notice...
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Re: 1.5inch female connector. Pipe broken off inside. Any way to connect another pipe

Why?

This is an exterior 70cm pipe leading to an open drain? If once it's attached and painted it's basically unnoticeable and undetectable, what's the problem?

More over, if it means not having to rip loads of piping out from inside the house (& I mean loads), from behind kitchen cupboards that are completely in the way, risking introducing even more hassle and work?

But if your wisdom dictates I should personally mess around for a day, or dish out £100+, to end up with nothing more than 'piece of mind', fair enough.


I bet, when an 'adapter' is fitted and painted, no one will ever notice...
We have already done that bit Neil & I don't disagree with you on going inside but where my own professional standards as a plumber kick in, is the use of a bit of rubber & a jubilee clip to repair a pipe (painted or not). There are now lots of people out there who think like you & not me but I hope by maintaining good standards & correct use of materials I can separate myself for them so that customers will appreciate the difference.
 
Re: 1.5inch female connector. Pipe broken off inside. Any way to connect another pipe

We have already done that bit Neil & I don't disagree with you on going inside but where my own professional standards as a plumber kick in, is the use of a bit of rubber & a jubilee clip to repair a pipe (painted or not). There are now lots of people out there who think like you & not me but I hope by maintaining good standards & correct use of materials I can separate myself for them so that customers will appreciate the difference.

That's fair enough - But I can tell you the pipe coming through the wall is immediately glued/welded into another joint/pipe (inside), which in turn is glued/welded to others, and all this is behind kitchen units. As such access is difficult, so an easy job turns into a difficult job (for me at least) :(

So I can either attempt to risk (I use the work risk, as I'm not a plumber) doing the 'platinum' repair and undoubtedly spend hours and hours doing it. Or I can employ a plumber, which will most likely cost nigh on £100+ I suspect.

The alternative is to construct a simple (water tight) neat and tidy join between the existing 1.5" joint and the down pipe, which works 100%. If this can be achieved easily and aesthetically, in just a few minutes, with no risk, then I'm happy. :)
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Re: 1.5inch female connector. Pipe broken off inside. Any way to connect another pipe

Why?

This is an exterior 70cm pipe leading to an open drain? If once it's attached and painted it's basically unnoticeable and undetectable, what's the problem?

More over, if it means not having to rip loads of piping out from inside the house (& I mean loads), from behind kitchen cupboards that are completely in the way, risking introducing even more hassle and work?

But if your wisdom dictates I should personally mess around for a day, or dish out £100+, to end up with nothing more than 'piece of mind', fair enough.


I bet, when an 'adapter' is fitted and painted, no one will ever notice...

But WE all know, and that's what's important!
 
Re: 1.5inch female connector. Pipe broken off inside. Any way to connect another pipe

Plumb Centre or Pipe Centre do rubber connectors with 2 jubilee clips suitable for low /med pressure IF there is enough sticking out of the wall. Still looks horrid but a 5min job.
 
Re: 1.5inch female connector. Pipe broken off inside. Any way to connect another pipe

Seems like I`m 5mins too late with last post
 
Re: 1.5inch female connector. Pipe broken off inside. Any way to connect another pipe

Plumb Centre or Pipe Centre do rubber connectors with 2 jubilee clips suitable for low /med pressure IF there is enough sticking out of the wall. Still looks horrid but a 5min job.

Just got a 1.5" to 1.5" rubber connector from local garden center. This actually holds the female end and the male end togethor and obviously forms a water right seal around each. There's no standing water involved, only lower pressure passing water so I doubt it will leak.

So was a 1min job to fit :)

As long as it holds (can't imagine it won't), I'll simply paint white and doubt you'll even notice it against the white pipe its connected onto, and the white brickwork an inch behind it :) (Note: The jubilee screws are around the back so out of site etc)

Fingers crossed!
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Re: 1.5inch female connector. Pipe broken off inside. Any way to connect another pipe

I'm a bit late with this but a smallish sanding drum in a cordless drill or if you're very careful a hole saw would get the pipe out of the middle. You could then glue a new bit in using a gap filling cement. Proper job then with no bodging. Doesn't help the OP but it may help someone else.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Reply to 1.5inch female connector. Pipe broken off inside. Any way to connect another pipe? in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

Similar plumbing topics

All, We have an old soil pipe stack which has an inner diameter of 90mm. I presume it is a pitch fibre soil pipe (it's not cast iron). I...
Replies
4
Views
6K
Hello All- (Usual caveats apply: I am the rather unusual part-time variety of a GSRE, training self-funded and slowly trying to make my way and...
Replies
0
Views
64
  • Locked
I need to lay on a new supply to an outside tap on the house wall, and another which is about 30metres down the garden by the garage, the blue...
Replies
4
Views
6K
V
  • Locked
hi all i am fitting a new sink to an extension on the house. all internal pipework has been done. the problem i am having is on the outside...
Replies
2
Views
6K
ifielding
I
C
  • Locked
Hi all Having some problems with my combi boiler ariston microgenus. Not too fimiliar with boilers reason why im here so pls help. I turn the...
Replies
6
Views
5K
chippy plumbob
C
Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock