Gas pipe under loft insulation. | Gas Engineers Forum | Plumbers Forums
Guest viewing is limited

Welcome to the forum. Although you can post in any forum, the USA forum is here in case of local regs or laws

Discuss Gas pipe under loft insulation. in the Gas Engineers Forum area at Plumbers Forums

Messages
7
The copper gas pipe to my boiler in the loft runs between joists and sits on the plasterboard. I understand that it should not be covered by insulation. Why? Is it satisfactory to create a dome over the pipe with upside down guttering and then put fibreglass insulation over the top please?
 
Think your getting confused with wires ideally you don’t want wires/ cables encapsulated in insulation as it de rates there load capacity

The gas pipe should have its own clips / supports but other than that never heard of no insulation around it
 
Think your getting confused with wires ideally you don’t want wires/ cables encapsulated in insulation as it de rates there load capacity

The gas pipe should have its own clips / supports but other than that never heard of no insulation around it
Thanks Shaun
I'm basing this on BS 6891:2015 on low pressure gas pipework which says 8.9.13 Pipework shall not be laid below or within roof space insulation material.
 
Is it staying non habitable/ no floor going on it ?
 
I'm not sure this is the reason, so treat it as a guess, but if some types of insulation get wet (die to condensation / leaks in the roof space) it creates a corrosive environment that attacks pipes. I've only seen this with steel pipes, but copper corrodes nicely too.
 
Lagg it with pipe insulation doesn’t touch any insulation then tbh seen most bungalows with new insulation over the top of pipes with no problem
 
My understanding is that if it is covered in loft insulation, it is similar to it being installed in an un-ventilated void.

That would be the same for upside down guttering, especially if it was also covered in loft insulation.

It is to prevent any leak from building up in volume and or migrating.
 
My understanding is that if it is covered in loft insulation, it is similar to it being installed in an un-ventilated void.

That would be the same for upside down guttering, especially if it was also covered in loft insulation.

It is to prevent any leak from building up in volume and or migrating.
Thank you. That is very helpful.
 

Similar plumbing topics

Thanks for the advice!
Replies
2
Views
653
Just to round this off with what I found here...
Replies
5
Views
773
Max notch 1/8 the depth of the joist like any...
Replies
3
Views
2K
Yes! Freshly installed last week. My...
Replies
2
Views
2K
Back
Top