Leaking shower in wall??? | Showers and Wetrooms Advice | Plumbers Forums

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Discusdan

Hi there I have a triton tees mixer shower. Lately I have noticed a large scale build up and seen there is a very tiny amount of water that runs down the tile. Probably a few millilitres a day if that. I have had a home serve plumber out to check and he has said needs tiles off as he doesn't know how far back leak will be . Is this leak likely to need that to be fixed I would have thought it would just be the connector from pipe to mixer bar but I'm far from knowledgeable in plumbing?
 

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As above, the HomeServe guy is the one that has eyes on the issue so he is best placed to advise you accordingly sadly when pipework is concealed a little distruction is necessary if they think there is a leak. Wouldn't you rather that there wasn't a larger problem just waiting to happen further down the line
 
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Difficulty you've got is that the water may just be running from the joint but it could also be running down the pipe and into the wall. You don't know unless you investigate, I'm sure you'd rather your wall didn't rot
 
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As I say it hinges on what the guy on site thinks has gone on. It could just be that the joint needs re-making to stop the leak. It could be that where it's been leaking it's actually caused some damage. It's very difficult to give you an in depth assessment on a forum
 
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I know it's clearly leaking from the tape so at least try that first. He had a quick look without taking anything apart and said yeh needs tiles off leaking in the wall . But a new shower might fix it
 
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It might yes. I don't know the shower you've got, pipe centres may be odd and he is needing to adjust the pipework in order to accommodate a new shower. My point you keep ignoring though is whether it's caused damage elsewhere. I don't know what home serves remit is but if I were in the same position I'd definitely be drawing my customers attention to potential long term damage. My recommendation is ask Homeserve
 
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I know it's clearly leaking from the tape so at least try that first. He had a quick look without taking anything apart and said yeh needs tiles off leaking in the wall . But a new shower might fix it


It might yes. I don't know the shower you've got, pipe centres may be odd and he is needing to adjust the pipework in order to accommodate a new shower. My point you keep ignoring though is whether it's caused damage elsewhere. I don't know what home serves remit is but if I were in the same position I'd definitely be drawing my customers attention to potential long term damage. My recommendation is ask Homeserve
 
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You can tell be his work he's not a professional even if he is a plumber, he hasn't waterproofed the hole in the tile.

Is this just a bar shower?
 
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Looks like it's piped up for a bar shower with threaded adaptors. Then a shower that needs 15mm copper stuck out, has been used. Then to adapt, from female thread to copper tail, they have used radiator valve tails!
Really is a simple fix for an average plumber.
 
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Would you be concerned that water has been leaking and is damaging brickwork?
Without taking a tile off, you can't tell. If it is the tail/thread, most will have been dripping into the shower area. But fix the leak first. Then, if that cures it, seal the joint between the tile and the fitting with silicone to sop water getting behind.
Personally, I would not remove the tile if reselling the thread cures it.
 
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That's a standard bar mixer fitted using the offsets that come with the kit
The offsets are threaded into a 1/2 female fitting, either a straight or elbow.
You can redo that joint but the danger is you may loosen another joint within the wall.
 
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Ok what do you reckon my best bet is ? To be honest when I tightened the shower back on that bit did move slightly and the leak seems to have reduced slightly. Is it just a spanner needed to tighten that in to the bit in the wall I can't tell because of all that tape or sealant
 
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That's a standard bar mixer fitted using the offsets that come with the kit
The offsets are threaded into a 1/2 female fitting, either a straight or elbow.
You can redo that joint but the danger is you may loosen another joint within the wall.

Absolutely agree with that.
Had a mare of a job a couple of months ago because of those darned triton offsets that people insist on using. Undoing the shower can cause the hidden compression fitting to move and subsequently leak. Loctite 55 would help, but best course of action for me is to repipe with copper coming out of wall at 150s into a shower backplate. It would involve some tile 'persuasion' but it's the best way IMO.
 
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Looking at the photo (the way the hole had been drilled in the tile) it looks like it has been fitted after the wall has been tiled. Is there access from behind ie a plasterboard wall?
It should be screwed into wall plate adaptors but there is no guarantee. If it is not wall plates there is a risk the fitting behind will slacken when you try to undo it then you will have a leak inside the wall.
 
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