Hello.
I am looking to install an outside tap.
It will be fixed to external house wall above a drain and the best access to cold water water supply is thru the wall to the utility area where I have a sink and a washing machine.
The pipe work under the sink is a bit restricted and not very long and there doesn't seem to be much give in it. So I am now unsure of my original approach to cut the pipe and install a copper Tee fitting. Not having done soldering before I was going to install a compression Tee and then take pipe out from there to the wall then thru the wall to the garden tap.
But I don;t want to cut out a section then find that I can't squeeze in the tee-fitting and my water supply to the sink and washing machine would be buggered. So I have some questions please which I hope some experienced people might be able to answer.
1. What is the approach if there is very little give in the pipe to fit a Tee-fitting ? Is there a way to cut out a larger section then somehow 'rebuild' it. I guess the same question is if you have cut out a section which is too big...how do you 'repair' it ?
2. In the same area, there is an existing elbow in the pipework for the washing machine. This has the standard washing machine valve (15mm) fitting with blue handle. The washing machine standard hose connects to this valve.
I was wondering if this could be used with a Y-splitter of some kind so using the same valve to feed both the washing machine and some new pipework leading to the garden tap. The new pipework to the garden tap would have its own isolation valve and check valve so the water would be separate.
Would the downside be the water pressure ? As i presume that the washing machine valve reduces the water from the standard 15mm ...I think I read it reduces it to 5 or 6mm ? So that might not be enough for garden tap needed for hose , washing car , pressure wash etc ?
But also, fitting the required isolation valve and check valve to new pipework ...does this not also reduce the water pressure from the initial 15mm ??
3. Is copper still the best way to go with regards to pipework and valves etc ? I see that that Hep20 seems be getting some good reviews ?
Many Thanks.
I am looking to install an outside tap.
It will be fixed to external house wall above a drain and the best access to cold water water supply is thru the wall to the utility area where I have a sink and a washing machine.
The pipe work under the sink is a bit restricted and not very long and there doesn't seem to be much give in it. So I am now unsure of my original approach to cut the pipe and install a copper Tee fitting. Not having done soldering before I was going to install a compression Tee and then take pipe out from there to the wall then thru the wall to the garden tap.
But I don;t want to cut out a section then find that I can't squeeze in the tee-fitting and my water supply to the sink and washing machine would be buggered. So I have some questions please which I hope some experienced people might be able to answer.
1. What is the approach if there is very little give in the pipe to fit a Tee-fitting ? Is there a way to cut out a larger section then somehow 'rebuild' it. I guess the same question is if you have cut out a section which is too big...how do you 'repair' it ?
2. In the same area, there is an existing elbow in the pipework for the washing machine. This has the standard washing machine valve (15mm) fitting with blue handle. The washing machine standard hose connects to this valve.
I was wondering if this could be used with a Y-splitter of some kind so using the same valve to feed both the washing machine and some new pipework leading to the garden tap. The new pipework to the garden tap would have its own isolation valve and check valve so the water would be separate.
Would the downside be the water pressure ? As i presume that the washing machine valve reduces the water from the standard 15mm ...I think I read it reduces it to 5 or 6mm ? So that might not be enough for garden tap needed for hose , washing car , pressure wash etc ?
But also, fitting the required isolation valve and check valve to new pipework ...does this not also reduce the water pressure from the initial 15mm ??
3. Is copper still the best way to go with regards to pipework and valves etc ? I see that that Hep20 seems be getting some good reviews ?
Many Thanks.