Post by Deleted on Sept 5, 2017 13:22:01 GMT
Right then, that has me suitably confused....& thats without the barracking of fellow experts !
My pipes are tightly clustered so I do not think I can cut in below the tee-piece - no room to get a pipe cutter between them & be able to turn it more than 30-60 degrees.
I could go thru the pipe with power multi-tool but not sure how nice & square the cut would be.
The pipe-cutters do a great job of making square cuts.
I had thought to cut the pipe above the vent T & rebuild the connections with a new vent T higher up - but same problem - no F@##~~ space to move a cutter.
I have some rubber mounting stuff to dampen noise/vibrations & I grabbed some flexis for same reason. I can just put it on the floor but that doesn't invert the pump motor above the impeller. I have to wonder about these designers, it is a big lump to have dangling.
I still think the only way possible is to splice in to the HW outlet above the cylinder before the vent & run pipes down to the pump & back.
It is so tight. It was obviously laid out to prevent any changes without major work involved.
I am seeing quite a lot of that methodology here - everything seems to be a cover-up, where it looked/worked OK for a while after the bill was paid - no come-backs - & then it starts falling apart & it's impossible to do anything without a 2nd mortgage.
Only upside is the pump would probably do the job I want it to quite well...
This is my replacement of the chicken tiles so far. Luckily it's difficult to see the major f¬@#~ up on the edge sealant (Whhhhyyyy!? ) which I will shortly be scraping out to start over. Found out too late about the way the production of truly flat surfaces had been banned by the plasterer... would have meant knocking the whole wall off tho.
Attachment Deleted
Thanks for the guidance - I will go & scratch my head for a bit
My pipes are tightly clustered so I do not think I can cut in below the tee-piece - no room to get a pipe cutter between them & be able to turn it more than 30-60 degrees.
I could go thru the pipe with power multi-tool but not sure how nice & square the cut would be.
The pipe-cutters do a great job of making square cuts.
I had thought to cut the pipe above the vent T & rebuild the connections with a new vent T higher up - but same problem - no F@##~~ space to move a cutter.
I have some rubber mounting stuff to dampen noise/vibrations & I grabbed some flexis for same reason. I can just put it on the floor but that doesn't invert the pump motor above the impeller. I have to wonder about these designers, it is a big lump to have dangling.
I still think the only way possible is to splice in to the HW outlet above the cylinder before the vent & run pipes down to the pump & back.
It is so tight. It was obviously laid out to prevent any changes without major work involved.
I am seeing quite a lot of that methodology here - everything seems to be a cover-up, where it looked/worked OK for a while after the bill was paid - no come-backs - & then it starts falling apart & it's impossible to do anything without a 2nd mortgage.
Only upside is the pump would probably do the job I want it to quite well...
This is my replacement of the chicken tiles so far. Luckily it's difficult to see the major f¬@#~ up on the edge sealant (Whhhhyyyy!? ) which I will shortly be scraping out to start over. Found out too late about the way the production of truly flat surfaces had been banned by the plasterer... would have meant knocking the whole wall off tho.
Attachment Deleted
Thanks for the guidance - I will go & scratch my head for a bit