Hi,
Help, please.
When I empty a full basin, waste water comes up in the bath.
How could I cure this?
I've lived with it for a while, but it's annoying & I'd like to know a solution.
I had a new basin plumbed in ("professionally"), which followed the existing link to the bath waste (which in turn flows to WC back, on to stack)..
It's a 1-level apartment, the set-up is like this:
Basin > u-trap (new, plastic 30/40 mm ish )
- V vertical drop 2 ft or so (old, metal 1½ inch)
.
> horizontal (or thereabouts) to a main stack
> it passes the bath small u-trap, about a yard on
> then it passes the back of the WC (usual U-trap), another 5 or 6 feet
> finally to stack another 5 or 6 feet . . . .
--
--
(2nd floor of 10 storeys, It's a 4inch stack - I dunno, '50s I guess...
which serves bathrooms & WCs. )
I assume the drop on the level is best practice, 2 degree or so, but it may be a flat.
So far as I know, the drains & stack are clear.
The original drainage, of good standard '50s, copper 1½ inch, incorporated an air-vent between the basin & bath, now blocked off.
Air-vents were standard back then, you still see them outside old houses in town. Personally I think they are superior to valves & such, which are often noisy).
The vent may have acted as a sump, I suppose, but would be a bit small for that.
The plumbers blocked the vent off, &/but did not fit a valve (probably my objection to the noise they make, & it might be OK anyway).
Any suggestions?
Help, please.
When I empty a full basin, waste water comes up in the bath.
How could I cure this?
I've lived with it for a while, but it's annoying & I'd like to know a solution.
I had a new basin plumbed in ("professionally"), which followed the existing link to the bath waste (which in turn flows to WC back, on to stack)..
It's a 1-level apartment, the set-up is like this:
Basin > u-trap (new, plastic 30/40 mm ish )
.
> it passes the bath small u-trap, about a yard on
> then it passes the back of the WC (usual U-trap), another 5 or 6 feet
> finally to stack another 5 or 6 feet . . . .
--
--
(2nd floor of 10 storeys, It's a 4inch stack - I dunno, '50s I guess...
which serves bathrooms & WCs. )
I assume the drop on the level is best practice, 2 degree or so, but it may be a flat.
So far as I know, the drains & stack are clear.
The original drainage, of good standard '50s, copper 1½ inch, incorporated an air-vent between the basin & bath, now blocked off.
Air-vents were standard back then, you still see them outside old houses in town. Personally I think they are superior to valves & such, which are often noisy).
The vent may have acted as a sump, I suppose, but would be a bit small for that.
The plumbers blocked the vent off, &/but did not fit a valve (probably my objection to the noise they make, & it might be OK anyway).
Any suggestions?
