Drain (gully) cover - Drain cover
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My first post and I'm a newbie so apologies for my total ignorance. I have an outside drain that drains from the kitchen sink to a ditch in a local field that should not be in place - it was done by the builders. There is a capped off pipe in the kitchen that the builders should have used (strange because they built the house) that goes to the storm drains and I have diverted the kitchen sink piping to the capped-off pipe and all is well (as per the other houses - they diverted their pipes some time ago). As I do not need the drain to the ditch I intend to plug the pipe (3" I think) and no longer need the drain which I think might be called a gully. At the moment it has a broken plastic cover and I would like to semi seal the drain with a plain cover (no holes in it). The drain is plastic with a square 210mm x 210mm top - within the lip of the drain top there are 4 (look like screw fixings) protrusions which are 150mm apart. It looks like you could get a cover that would fit into the 210mm square with screw fixings 150mm apart but I cannot find such a plain cover. I have seen on the web plastic covers with the slots in but I am looking for complete cover. Does such a thing exists? Thanks.
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My problem is that a conservatory has been built on the rear of the house. I guess the gully/drain should have been moved outside the conservatory but having recently moved into this property I have what I have. There are two loose floor tiles that give me access to the gully/drain cover. My initial thoughts was to fill it with concrete but it seemed a shame, if there was ever an emergency and I needed the old drainage - hence my thinking of plugging the 3" pipe in the gully and having a semi permanent cover. I.e. a lid over the drain and then a thin skim of concrete over the top. I could then put the floor tiles down with tile adhesive and make good. However, I do see the sense in permanently sealing the drain/gully. Stuff newspaper down the 3" pipe and ram down the pipe a few inches and then fill with concrete. I do not want to risk damaging the conservatory tiled floor. Cannot get replacement tiles and the conservatory goes the whole width of the house.
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that is not the way to plug a disused runquarkrad wrote: Stuff newspaper down the 3" pipe and ram down the pipe a few inches and then fill with concrete.
I find it hard to believe that waste water is being fed to a ditch
not sure of the legality of it
does the pipe you want to plug run to the ditch or to a foul water system?
cheers LLL
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Myself and neighbours recently had a soil treatment system installed in each house so we checked the drains both soil and storm so I'm confident what is what. Historically, for some reason, the builders by-passed the piping for the kitchen sink and diverted it to a pipe that eventually runs into the ditch. Many years ago both neighbours had their by-passes put back so their kitchen drainage discharges as per the building regs. Having recently moved in I discovered my house still had the by-pass in place so I have now conformed as it is against the Environmental Agency rules re: discharging into the river system. So, I'm happy now re the drainage and know that this by-pass only flows out to the ditch - it has no other purpose.
Hopefully there are two pictures attached. One picture is taken from inside the conservatory - you can see the outside wall, the kitchen is the other side of the window. Yo can see where I have cut the plastic pipe coming through the wall.
The other picture is a close up of the drain - I have cleaned it out, the hole/pipe to the ditch is to the right of the picture as you look at it. I.e. away from the house.
As you can see in the first picture I do want to disturb the floor tiles.
note: Sorry - I use imgbox to attached picture but it seems I cannot use it. The format has to be http://www.domain.com/picture.one.gif Can somebody advise me of a free hosting service I can use please that this site accepts.
Hopefully there are two pictures attached. One picture is taken from inside the conservatory - you can see the outside wall, the kitchen is the other side of the window. Yo can see where I have cut the plastic pipe coming through the wall.
The other picture is a close up of the drain - I have cleaned it out, the hole/pipe to the ditch is to the right of the picture as you look at it. I.e. away from the house.
As you can see in the first picture I do want to disturb the floor tiles.
note: Sorry - I use imgbox to attached picture but it seems I cannot use it. The format has to be http://www.domain.com/picture.one.gif Can somebody advise me of a free hosting service I can use please that this site accepts.
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This is about the closest picture I can get:
with the dimensions described above. Where the pipe entered there was a plastic triangular protrusion that also had a rubber cap on the top. Thing is, having said the only place this pipe goes to is eventually the ditch and I no longer use it what is the best method of decommissioning it (?) - as said, it was not really legal as a kitchen waste pipe. If ever the ditch flooded there is the possibility of a back fill so I need a permanent method of sealing. Is filling it with concrete the best option?
with the dimensions described above. Where the pipe entered there was a plastic triangular protrusion that also had a rubber cap on the top. Thing is, having said the only place this pipe goes to is eventually the ditch and I no longer use it what is the best method of decommissioning it (?) - as said, it was not really legal as a kitchen waste pipe. If ever the ditch flooded there is the possibility of a back fill so I need a permanent method of sealing. Is filling it with concrete the best option?
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Hopefully these are bigger. This is a close up of the drain:
This second picture was taken from the wall - showing the pipe that runs away to the ditch. You can see where I broke the 'cover' that was surrounding the pipe entry point.
The shiny dark bit at the bottom of the picture is the bottom of the drain.
This second picture was taken from the wall - showing the pipe that runs away to the ditch. You can see where I broke the 'cover' that was surrounding the pipe entry point.
The shiny dark bit at the bottom of the picture is the bottom of the drain.
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