Compression fitting are not ideal under floors if they are not easy accessible.
That obviously never occurred to the chap who fitted this one, then added a tiled floor over the top of it. I’ll make sure that the new floor allows better access.

Compression fitting are not ideal under floors if they are not easy accessible.
I’ll see if I can find one online..Pity you can't show us a pic
Not seen one for quite some time, which I suppose is why I described this one as "old". Mind you, probably still got one or two underneath the dust in the bottom of my tool box.Conex compression fittings used to be readily available and arguably look better than fittings with ordinary spanner flats. They were the go-to standard back in the 1970s and 1980s. However, they seem to be increasingly hard to find these days.

Ooh. Reckon I’d better go rootin’ in my toolbox. Might have something valuable to leave the kids after all!All the Wickes Compression fittings used to be Conex, and reasonably priced if you bought 10.
So I checked. They aren't any more, and they're over 3x the price I remember paying!.

Thanks for that. I've more or less decided now that I'll renew the fitting, then long term I should be able to rely on the joint remaining dry. But I'll make sure there's access in the floor for maintenance purposes.Stick some leak sealer in should sort out a weep like that
Many thanks. My first thought was indeed to isolate them as you do with wall tiles, but being perhaps more robust then I thought maybe there was a different technique. Can't do anything now till Friday, but I'll be sure to get togged up with safety gear before I tackle the job. I don't know whether they're ceramic or porcelain because they were here when we moved in. Are there any visual clues to the difference, or is it just a case of "hit with a hammer and see what happens"?You need to remove all the grout from around the tiles that are going to be removed. Effectively "isolating" them from those around them. If they are ceramic tiles ,not porcelain for instance, they should break out with a hammer. Wear protective goggles and gloves ,tiles will have razor sharp edges.

it was only as a get by till you were ready to do the bathroom properlyThanks for that. I've more or less decided now that I'll renew the fitting, then long term I should be able to rely on the joint remaining dry. But I'll make sure there's access in the floor for maintenance purposes.
Thanks again.it was only as a get by till you were ready to do the bathroom properly
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