Ok we're putting a Shower, Toilet and sink in.
Easy question first - For the shower we have decided on a Jetstream Venturi Effect Shower. Has anybody tried one of these do they really work???
The water feed to the bathroom is no problem, except that the above shower says it needs a check valve and a non-restrictive isolation valve installed on both the hot and cold supply. The only bit that got me unsure was the "non-restrictive" part. I have a pile of isolation valves (standard metal ones that you stick a screwdriver in and turn) are they non-restrictive? They look to make the hole thinner in the middle. Also does using plastic pipe with push fittings make the pipe restrictive??? (the inserts reduce the diameter) - I guess what I am asking is what exactly do they mean by non-restrictive?
And Finally - Waste. We have installed a 4" waste pipe to take the contents of the toilet to the stack. We also need to take the waste from the sink and the shower out, originally I had decided to use a pan connector with a boss connector (think that's the right word) on the bend, but that is too high for the shower. can I put one of the strap on type boss connectors on the side of the 4" waste pipe further down? - What I am worried about is:
a) will the flushing of the toilet suck the contents of the traps out??
b) is there any possibility of waste from the toilet flowing back up into the shower if there was a blockage??
I have seen air-admittance valves to put onto the 4" pipe, but I can't really fit one anywhere - do they do an air admittance valve to fit on the shower waste pipe to stop that sucking the water out?
Sorry for all the questions!
Matt
Easy question first - For the shower we have decided on a Jetstream Venturi Effect Shower. Has anybody tried one of these do they really work???
The water feed to the bathroom is no problem, except that the above shower says it needs a check valve and a non-restrictive isolation valve installed on both the hot and cold supply. The only bit that got me unsure was the "non-restrictive" part. I have a pile of isolation valves (standard metal ones that you stick a screwdriver in and turn) are they non-restrictive? They look to make the hole thinner in the middle. Also does using plastic pipe with push fittings make the pipe restrictive??? (the inserts reduce the diameter) - I guess what I am asking is what exactly do they mean by non-restrictive?
And Finally - Waste. We have installed a 4" waste pipe to take the contents of the toilet to the stack. We also need to take the waste from the sink and the shower out, originally I had decided to use a pan connector with a boss connector (think that's the right word) on the bend, but that is too high for the shower. can I put one of the strap on type boss connectors on the side of the 4" waste pipe further down? - What I am worried about is:
a) will the flushing of the toilet suck the contents of the traps out??
b) is there any possibility of waste from the toilet flowing back up into the shower if there was a blockage??
I have seen air-admittance valves to put onto the 4" pipe, but I can't really fit one anywhere - do they do an air admittance valve to fit on the shower waste pipe to stop that sucking the water out?
Sorry for all the questions!
Matt
