Discuss Capping the water supply in the British & UK Tiling Forum area at TilersForums.com.

R

rockyroo

Hi, Merry Christmas everyone

Just wanted to know what the best way to temporarily cap the water supply when you have removed the toilet and sink if there is no shut of valve on the pipe. Obviously will shut the water off from stop **** and then drain hot water, but I will need to leave it a day or two and can't leave them without water. I did see a sort of plastic stopper once but cannot find the name of it, any help would be greatly appreciated. Cheers
 
F

Fekin

Speed fit stop ends, cheap to buy and very very easy to use.

You can get them at B&Q or any plumbing suppliers

p4356399_l.jpg

For a toilet it will most probably be a 22mm pipe, just measure it before buying one.

You simply push the stop end onto the pipe and it will make a mild click, if that, and that's it, to get it off you just pull the little collar up and remove once done, and can be reused.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
P

plumbersmate

Speed fit stop ends, cheap to buy and very very easy to use.

You can get them at B&Q or any plumbing suppliers

p4356399_l.jpg

For a toilet it will most probably be a 22mm pipe, just measure it before buying one.

You simply push the stop end onto the pipe and it will make a mild click, if that, and that's it, to get it off you just pull the little collar up and remove once done, and can be reused.
me thinks you've done this a lot, fekin :yes:
 
F

Fekin

Push fittings are good to stop water flow temporarily, but it would be best to fit service valves to origional copper pipes, then fit flexi chrome pipes to them and the taps etc. PS toilets are normally 15mm as are sink pipes. Bath pipes tend to be 22m.


Not done much plumbing, so I could only go on my previous experiance's, and bath and sinks were 15mm and the toilets were 22mm.
 
S

silverfox

Hi, thanks for the advice, went to my local shop, got some grey ones, the guy said that you have to push them on and then unscrew them to get them off, does that sound right??

Yeah, same type of thing m8.

Some have to be dismantled to remove them and the internal ring of teeth which is whats left gripping the pipe, needs to be sliced to remove it. Throw away once used.
 

Reply to Capping the water supply in the British & UK Tiling Forum area at TilersForums.com

Subscribe to Tilers Forums

There are similar tiling threads here

J
Hi all, thrown myself in a the deep end and have bought porcerlain tiles for my bathroom, i have...
2
Replies
18
Views
4K
Bubblecraft
B
D
I just wanted to stop by and say "hello" from the other side of the pond, currently living in...
Replies
4
Views
2K
Bubblecraft
B
D
Installing LED lighting into tiles is becoming more popular as well as other lighting effects...
Replies
2
Views
15K
Deleted member 1779
D
4,858 of 4,965 people found the following review helpful 5.0 out of 5 stars Oh the shame...., 3...
Replies
3
Views
305
D
New Mexico Chili Cookoff If you can read this whole story without laughing, then there's no hope...
Replies
3
Views
586
J

Trending UK Tiling Threads

UK Tiling Forum Popular

Advertisement

Thread Information

Title
Capping the water supply
Prefix
N/A
Forum
British & UK Tiling Forum
Start date
Last reply date
Replies
8

Thread Tags

Which tile adhesive brand did you use most this year?

  • Palace

    Votes: 9 6.0%
  • Kerakoll

    Votes: 14 9.3%
  • Ardex

    Votes: 11 7.3%
  • Mapei

    Votes: 44 29.1%
  • Ultra Tile

    Votes: 18 11.9%
  • BAL

    Votes: 36 23.8%
  • Wedi

    Votes: 3 2.0%
  • Benfer

    Votes: 2 1.3%
  • Tilemaster

    Votes: 21 13.9%
  • Weber

    Votes: 18 11.9%
  • Other (any other brand not listed)

    Votes: 16 10.6%
  • Nicobond

    Votes: 7 4.6%
  • Norcros

    Votes: 3 2.0%
  • Kelmore

    Votes: 4 2.6%

You're browsing the UK Tiling Forum category on TilersForums.com, the tile advice website no matter which country you reside. Our UK based online tiling forum has 48,000 members and started out in 2006.

Top