rscho
29th April 2008, 08:06 PM
While investigating a blocked PVC stormwater pipe we found it was concreted into an old cast-iron pipe which ran about 15 metres before discharging to the gutter. The cast-iron pipe had failed long ago so we decided to replace it with PVC and tee into a 100mm PVC stormwater pipe we ran two years ago.
However when we went to connect the two we found that they are very slightly different in diameter, so that the old PVC pipe fits neatly into the non-socket end of the
newer 100mm PVC pipe. The older pipe also has a thinner wall and its outside diameter is 4", while the newer PVC pipe has an inside diameter of about 4". I don't think pipe cement can reliably bond the two as its not really a snug taper fit, so I'm considering using a bitumen type sealer (hydroseal?) along the mating faces.
My questions are: Why the slight difference in size? Could one be stormwater and the other sewer pipe? I thought all sizes had been standardised and I can't find any pipe that matches the older PVC.
Does anyone have any other suggestions to make a water-tight (tree-root tight) seal?
Thanks in advance.
However when we went to connect the two we found that they are very slightly different in diameter, so that the old PVC pipe fits neatly into the non-socket end of the
newer 100mm PVC pipe. The older pipe also has a thinner wall and its outside diameter is 4", while the newer PVC pipe has an inside diameter of about 4". I don't think pipe cement can reliably bond the two as its not really a snug taper fit, so I'm considering using a bitumen type sealer (hydroseal?) along the mating faces.
My questions are: Why the slight difference in size? Could one be stormwater and the other sewer pipe? I thought all sizes had been standardised and I can't find any pipe that matches the older PVC.
Does anyone have any other suggestions to make a water-tight (tree-root tight) seal?
Thanks in advance.