Shared hot and cold supply to sink and shower in ensuite | Showers and Wetrooms Advice | 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 Shared hot and cold supply to sink and shower in ensuite in the Showers and Wetrooms Advice area at Plumbers Forums

S

seftonbarn

I am preparing my new en-suite pipework for connection to hot and cold tanks by my plumber (at the same time that he fits a new boiler). Does Building Regulations allow me to "T" off the shower hot and cold supplies to the sink?

It is just that the ensuite is tiny and there is no way that me and the Mrs will be in there at the same time so therefore there would never be a situation where someone is using the taps on the sink at the same time as the shower was in use. The Mira Mixer that I have for the shower has a temperature safety device so that if cold pressure drops the shower shuts off.

I appreciate you advise.
 
The connections that your worried about is when the plumber connects onto cold water storage tank , the hot water must be above the cold water outlet so that the if a problem occurs the hot stops first then u get a cold shower but if wrong way round the cold would stop and you'd get scalded,
 
Upvote 0
If it's gravity system then you should have seperate feeds for the shower and the basin , if you have on the same feed then it will cause pressure variations when another outlet is opened,
 
Upvote 0
If it's gravity system then you should have seperate feeds for the shower and the basin , if you have on the same feed then it will cause pressure variations when another outlet is opened,

Thanks for your advice. I understand this. But in practical terms there will never be more than one person in the room (it's tiny). I am happy to have a shared supply to the shower and basin but my question is does this meet with building regulations? I realise it is good practice but is it legal.
 
Upvote 0
It will be a pith poor shower which will go to next to nothing if a hot top opens somewhere else in the house.

If doing something, do it properly first time.

I live in a bungalow with an existing gravity fed shower in the main bathroom. The shower has no pump and is perfect. The new shower will also be perfect because it will be a separate take from both hot and cold water tanks. I would like to avoid running separate supplies to the sink next to the shower; there will be no problems with pressure fluctuations because there will NEVER be 2 people in the new bathroom. Please can someone answer the simple question if this contravenes building regs. I don't need any other advice or opinions.
 
Upvote 0

Similar plumbing topics

  • Question
HI Basher UPDATE ; I found a seal kit!! as...
Replies
12
Views
948
B
  • Question
Hot water to hot shutting anti scold on shower...
Replies
2
Views
908
  • Question
What is your source of hot water? What bar...
Replies
2
Views
778
  • Question
Hi SI......is the shower on the same floor as...
Replies
12
Views
364
Back
Top