Preventing leaks on recessed 1/2” shower outlet connections

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I’ve installed two 1/2” female wall plates for shower outlets, which will be covered with XPS tile backer boards and then tiled. Once tiled, the wall plates will sit a few millimetres behind the finished tile. The shower outlet fitting (1/2” male thread with a decorative cover) screws into these plates.

The instructions say to slide the decorative cover on first, then wrap the male thread with PTFE and tighten it in. I’m planning to use Loctite 55 instead of PTFE.

From past experience, PTFE can be hit and miss. Sometimes it leaks still and you need to further tighten it more. I’ve also seen a lot of videos where this type of fitting slowly leaks and water ends up dripping inside the wall over time.

My concern is that once this fitting is installed and tiled, you can’t actually see or check the joint at all. You’re basically trusting that it doesn’t leak, with no way to monitor it later. That idea makes me a bit uneasy.

How do professionals make sure these connections are definitely leak-free before everything is sealed up? Is there any way to properly confirm it?

I was thinking of sealing behind the wall plate (for example with CT1), so that if it ever did leak, the water would come out the front rather than into the wall. Would that make sense?

Also, if I use Loctite 55 and then add a light smear of LS-X over the thread as extra protection, is that overkill or a sensible “belt and braces” approach? or can LS-X potentially fail or make the loctite 55 not work?

Any advice on how to make sure this doesn’t slowly weep and cause damage over time would be much appreciated.
 
How do professionals make sure these connections are definitely leak-free before everything is sealed up?
Experience, but shower outlets are under no pressure really, you'd have to get it seriously wrong to cause any leaks. You could cap them and pressure test if it is worrying you.
 
Experience, but shower outlets are under no pressure really, you'd have to get it seriously wrong to cause any leaks. You could cap them and pressure test if it is worrying you.

Yes I have capped it and put a temporary pushfit valve to flush the pipes and there’s no leaks to the plate itself but even after temporarily capping it when it comes to the final install, i have to unthread the temp fitting and then thread the finishing item. And it’s the finishing item that is concerning me because you essentially threading it in and can never inspect behind it because there is a decorative cover to cover the opening
 
On another note, if i've got a fitting that needs to end in an exact orientation. and if i'm tightening it and it feels like its getting tight and may not make it to the next full turn to align properly, what's the best solution for this? apparently loctite 55 is good for those cases where u need to wind it back a little. But does that not mean it's not full tight and can potentially leak too?
 
No, you can wind it back a bit with loctite ok. Put it on dry though, and count the number of turns you need. That way you aren't tempted to give it another turn and it won't go fully round.
 

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