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I have been asked to install a standalone bath instead of the originally agreed standard corner bath. The first fix was done months ago and the bath waste was intended to go straight into the floor
into a solvent weld tee that has already been installed and waiting for the bath waste to be glued into it. The finished floor has now already been installed so the solvent weld tee in the floor cannot be changed.
The problem is that the customer has bought a chrome waste, trap and waste pipe for the (not planned) standalone bath and still expects me to install everything as planned. My question is, has anybody connected a chrome bath waste pipe to a solvent weld joint using silicone alone as, in order to use the chrome waste pipe, it will have to be pushed into the solvent weld tee below floor level. I know it's not standard plumbing practice but is there any reason why this wouldn't work ?
I know I could use a compression elbow but this would have to be above floor level and the customer wants chrome all the way.
Thanks in advance for any helpful advice.
into a solvent weld tee that has already been installed and waiting for the bath waste to be glued into it. The finished floor has now already been installed so the solvent weld tee in the floor cannot be changed.
The problem is that the customer has bought a chrome waste, trap and waste pipe for the (not planned) standalone bath and still expects me to install everything as planned. My question is, has anybody connected a chrome bath waste pipe to a solvent weld joint using silicone alone as, in order to use the chrome waste pipe, it will have to be pushed into the solvent weld tee below floor level. I know it's not standard plumbing practice but is there any reason why this wouldn't work ?
I know I could use a compression elbow but this would have to be above floor level and the customer wants chrome all the way.
Thanks in advance for any helpful advice.
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