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Discuss Dead leg in bathroom in the UK Plumbing Forum | Plumbing Advice area at PlumbersForums.net

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I have a first floor flat that I am doing a refit in . The current wc is plumbed using 10mm jg. The bath is being replaced with an electric shower . There were originally 2 drain offs on vertical’s for the bath and one drain off on the 10mm vertical for the wc. All other pipe work is 15mm speedfit. If I were to do away with the 10mm wc connection, I would be left with a dead leg in excess of 2m. I cannot start pulling the original ceiling down . Can I combine the old 10mm and new 15mm feeds to both shower and toilet with a single drain off to avoid this dead leg ?

cheers
paul
 
Can you draw it out eg picture ?
 
Can you draw it out eg picture ?
Bit old school, no smart phone etc . No pics . It was a standard 1700 bath with the wc at the head end . It’s being replaced with a 1700 tray on a raised plinth. The 10mm comes down the metsec wall about 300mm from head of the bath, the 15mm hot feed at the tap end of the bath has been blanked . My proposal was to extend the 15mm cold from the tap end to the wc, combining it with the existing 10mm feed to the wc to prevent the dead leg, with a single drain, discretely hidden at the end of the shower plinth. This indicates a maximum dead leg length of 150mm. Got to cook dinner but wll investigate drawing a diagram after said .
 
What system do you have eg combi boiler cylinder etc ?
 
Perhaps this helps, sorry for the drawing. Top is existing bottom is proposed . Joining existing 10mm to wc with a tee to new 15mm from shower Hence a single drain off .
 

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Yes you could do that but it all depends where the existing bath is fed off if it’s off the unvented cold this will be at a lower pressure maybe than the toilet supply tbh it’s a short run I would cap it off as close back as you could possible
 

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