Minimal fall = non return valve/anti flood valve

Foul and surface water, private drains and public sewers, land drains and soakaways, filter drains and any other ways of getting rid of water.
joydivision
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Post: # 59666Post joydivision

A seperate toilet has been moved from the rear of a property and put in the bathroom which initially only housed a basin and bath. The bathroom is on the front of the property.
The bathroom wastes end up in a trap gully along with a rainwater pipe at present, and a soilstack has been created next to this gully and joins the gullys underground drainage on a y junction as its a duel syatem.

Problem is, the original underground drainage has almost no fall from the gully/soilstack for the first 3 meters or so and due to this, backflow is occuring from the toilet and ending up with toilet paper etc in the gully trap!! not good!!

What solutions are there?

The gully/soilstack cant be raised any more to create more fall, and chasing the line of underground drainage back to get a substantial fall is really a very last resort as i will end up chasing it quite a way!

Im thinking of conecting the soilstack to the underground drainage further away from the gully, so in theory i will have to seperate runs for 1.5 meters or so until they y junction together.??

Other idea is a non return valve on the stack and gully, but to be honest, i have never used these and know little of them, plus they seem pretty pricey!!

Cheers for any advice

allan
A tidy job is a happy job.

lutonlagerlout
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Post: # 59668Post lutonlagerlout

saniflow is your friend here
if there really is no fall (which can happen) then a macerator can get you out of trouble
other than that ,hook the lot out and redo in plastic
:O £££££ :O

cheers LLL
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joydivision
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Location: manchester

Post: # 59672Post joydivision

yeah, not cheap either way!

thanks for the advice.

Any ideas if the valves would work on a situation like this?

Like you say, the first couple of meters of original drainage is pretty much level, maybe a couple of mm in my favour!

cheers again

Allan
A tidy job is a happy job.

lutonlagerlout
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Post: # 59673Post lutonlagerlout

well plastic you can get away with 1:80 fall
old clay pipes tended to have around 1:40
never heard of any non return valves in a foul pipe
LLL
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seanandruby
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Post: # 59681Post seanandruby

can't you run the foul directly to manhole, or put in a new manhole further down the line rather than an oblique branch junction?
sean

Pablo
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Post: # 59685Post Pablo

Most of the darinage manufacturers make a shallow gully that would allow you to replace and raise the fall of the existing one. I think the non return valves are for flood water only and wouldn't work if there was no fall and even pressure on both sides.
Can't see it from my house

flowjoe
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Post: # 59689Post flowjoe

Are you sure a 45 degree junction was used and not a curved square one, you shouldn't get any surcharge even if the pipe is level with the force behind it being so close to the SVP.

Moving the connection further away will help, renewing as much of the old run as possible in plastic will also help because as LLL touched on modern pipes are a lot smoother

The are non-return valves for foul waste but all that will happen is the paper etc will build up, move down the line and cover the end of the junction from the SVP.
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joydivision
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Location: manchester

Post: # 59704Post joydivision

Thanks everyone for the advice.

On further insepction today and revealing more of the line of underground drainage, it seems when i got the level on it there is actualy a backfall of around 40mm from the point the new drainage was connected for around 2 meters, then begins to fall the correct way.

So looks like il be pulling the existing up quite a way and renewing in plastic tomorrow!

Cheers again

Allan
A tidy job is a happy job.

seanandruby
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Post: # 59715Post seanandruby

You really need to be thinking of installing an inspection chamber. Foul drainage needs to be accessible for maintenance.
sean

haggistini
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Post: # 59718Post haggistini

backfall is better than no fall at all
:;):
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seanandruby
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Post: # 59725Post seanandruby

haggistini wrote:backfall is better than no fall at all
:;):
That is not true hag. I know your saying it as a joke but you would'nt believe the amount of drainlayers who quote that phrase and go with it. It should be thrown in the skip along with " that's near enough, that's good enough, can't see it from my house". "That's perfect, spot on, bang on," are much better :;): If it's near enough it's good enough, so it must be good enough, because it's near enough :laugh:
sean

Mikey_C
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Post: # 59727Post Mikey_C

or my personal favourite from a mate who was ex navy "close enough for government work"

Dave_L
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Post: # 59730Post Dave_L

"Near enough for a job in the country!"
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lutonlagerlout
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Post: # 59742Post lutonlagerlout

alright for a country job :;):
spot in-ish :O
it wont be seen :cool:
LLL
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flowjoe
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Post: # 59747Post flowjoe

Isn't it the street mason who says to the scientist its OK for you guys working to a micro-millimeter, but these flags have to be spot on !:)



Edited By flowjoe on 1298210179
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