Gas pipe under concrete floor
Discussion
I have a gas pipe running under a bedroom floor and lounge into a kitchen. The bedroom and lounge are suspended wooden floors, however I intend to replace the bedroom floor with concrete/ insulation and screed. How do I protect the gas pipe? Can it be run through the insulation or is it easier to re-route it around the bungalow outside? ( approx 12 metres). I know this has to be done by a 'Gas safe' engineer and I can get quotes. Just wondering if there is a preferred option. Central heating/ radiator pipes will be run through the insulation
When I added gas to my pokey little flat, there was an easy route that would have meant the gas pipe was not visually checkable for about a meter (through the wall next to an old chimney breast) - this was not allowed so they had to route it the long way through the bedroom, up high, more bends etc etc.
joe jag said:
I have a gas pipe running under a bedroom floor and lounge into a kitchen. The bedroom and lounge are suspended wooden floors, however I intend to replace the bedroom floor with concrete/ insulation and screed. How do I protect the gas pipe?
When I ran CH pipes through a concrete floor my local plumbers' merchant recommended some kind of very hairy covering; it comes flat in a roll but I can't remember what it's called. Still got most of it left.Simpo Two said:
joe jag said:
I have a gas pipe running under a bedroom floor and lounge into a kitchen. The bedroom and lounge are suspended wooden floors, however I intend to replace the bedroom floor with concrete/ insulation and screed. How do I protect the gas pipe?
When I ran CH pipes through a concrete floor my local plumbers' merchant recommended some kind of very hairy covering; it comes flat in a roll but I can't remember what it's called. Still got most of it left.I’m not a gas engineer but hessian definitely is wrong.
I’ve only seen pipes wrapped in thick oily denso tape, at incoming points, as it’s corrosion resistant, but if you look at the gas regs it suggests a plastic sleeve. You can I believe bury tracpipe, but I haven’t seen it done.
Don’t guess, as other posts say, ask a suitably Gas Safe registered fitter.
I’ve only seen pipes wrapped in thick oily denso tape, at incoming points, as it’s corrosion resistant, but if you look at the gas regs it suggests a plastic sleeve. You can I believe bury tracpipe, but I haven’t seen it done.
Don’t guess, as other posts say, ask a suitably Gas Safe registered fitter.
Simpo Two said:
SpeedBash said:
That's it.https://plumbingsuppliesdirect.co.uk/denso-waterpr...
PRO5T said:
Simpo Two said:
SpeedBash said:
That's it.https://plumbingsuppliesdirect.co.uk/denso-waterpr...
Simpo Two said:
PRO5T said:
Simpo Two said:
SpeedBash said:
That's it.https://plumbingsuppliesdirect.co.uk/denso-waterpr...
Simpo Two said:
joe jag said:
I have a gas pipe running under a bedroom floor and lounge into a kitchen. The bedroom and lounge are suspended wooden floors, however I intend to replace the bedroom floor with concrete/ insulation and screed. How do I protect the gas pipe?
When I ran CH pipes through a concrete floor my local plumbers' merchant recommended some kind of very hairy covering; it comes flat in a roll but I can't remember what it's called. Still got most of it left.PRO5T said:
Awesome, unless you're toilet is gas powered I wouldn't bother either. For gas, or any installation that may be covered by building regs as the OP asked for, use Denso tape.
I said at the start it was CH, ie water. But the interface we're dealing with is the same - copper to concrete.Mentioned earlier Tracpipe is the simplest solution. Flexible and already plastic coated. An absolute nono is burying joints and fittings under concrete.
https://www.tracpipe.co.uk/
https://www.tracpipe.co.uk/
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