Hi All!
I'm no plumber or skilled DIYer really, but just wondering what to do. Here's the situation in the ensuite bathroom on my house that I bought recently:
1) Very smelly! [xx(][xx(][xx(]
2) Poor tiling and suspected botch-job.
3) Suspect shower is source of smells!
The bathroom itself is a small narrow room, the width of a shower. So, open door and shower on your left, in front of you the hand basin, and on your right the toilet and window. That's it.
...so, I had a quick look on the internet and found that a shower should have a trap of some kind. I read that you should be able to shine a torch down the shower plug hole and see the water in there (i.e. the water acting as a plug in the trap). I can't see anything in there, but the pipe seems to go down vertically, then just slopes off horizontally toward the front of the shower! I thought I'd better have a look under the shower via the front 'panel' as you step into the shower. Unfortunately, i think that botch-job man seems to have installed the shower tray in sideways, so that the front panel (which I thought would be useful for access under there!) is actually a 'fixed' side panel and seems to be part of the tray itself. So the whole lot seems to have been just sealed into place, and then tiled around!!! Yikes! So basically I can't get under the shower tray to look or even fit a shower trap if it needs one!
I am going to rip out the whole suite anyway because it's
a) a grey suite with pink tiles (!)
b) the show doesn't seem to have a 'cut off' switch anywhere that I can see [:0]
c) doesn't have any ventilation at all
d) stinks (see above)
...but before I do that (I can't afford it yet which is why the posting on here) I was wondering if anyone has any advice for me on this - does my diagnosis of the shower not having a trap seem sensible if I can't see any water when I look straight down with a torch? Am I right in the fact that the shower is installed incorrectly? Also, there should be a cut off thing for the electric too, right?!
I have no DIY experience, and all the above 'knowledge' is gleaned from the internet!
Please help me, my plubming friends!!! [^]
I'm no plumber or skilled DIYer really, but just wondering what to do. Here's the situation in the ensuite bathroom on my house that I bought recently:
1) Very smelly! [xx(][xx(][xx(]
2) Poor tiling and suspected botch-job.
3) Suspect shower is source of smells!
The bathroom itself is a small narrow room, the width of a shower. So, open door and shower on your left, in front of you the hand basin, and on your right the toilet and window. That's it.
...so, I had a quick look on the internet and found that a shower should have a trap of some kind. I read that you should be able to shine a torch down the shower plug hole and see the water in there (i.e. the water acting as a plug in the trap). I can't see anything in there, but the pipe seems to go down vertically, then just slopes off horizontally toward the front of the shower! I thought I'd better have a look under the shower via the front 'panel' as you step into the shower. Unfortunately, i think that botch-job man seems to have installed the shower tray in sideways, so that the front panel (which I thought would be useful for access under there!) is actually a 'fixed' side panel and seems to be part of the tray itself. So the whole lot seems to have been just sealed into place, and then tiled around!!! Yikes! So basically I can't get under the shower tray to look or even fit a shower trap if it needs one!
I am going to rip out the whole suite anyway because it's
a) a grey suite with pink tiles (!)
b) the show doesn't seem to have a 'cut off' switch anywhere that I can see [:0]
c) doesn't have any ventilation at all
d) stinks (see above)
...but before I do that (I can't afford it yet which is why the posting on here) I was wondering if anyone has any advice for me on this - does my diagnosis of the shower not having a trap seem sensible if I can't see any water when I look straight down with a torch? Am I right in the fact that the shower is installed incorrectly? Also, there should be a cut off thing for the electric too, right?!
I have no DIY experience, and all the above 'knowledge' is gleaned from the internet!
Please help me, my plubming friends!!! [^]
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