First off the flue joints (it was over 2m long using a couple of extensions) were taped over with gaffer tape. Bad sign. Or rather, the only joint visible was gaffer-taped: the rest of the flue was boxed-in with no access (contra section <mumble> of the GSIUR).
Ripping off the boxing revealed that the entire flue was supported only on the studwork, had no fall (in either direction) and was sagging in the middle. The half-gallon of water that drenched my lower anatomy when I pried apart a couple of sections told me why it was sagging: the air duct had filled up with water which was just sitting there with nowhere to go.
Most of the deluge had gone by the time I'd got out of the way and got my camera out. |
OK, so the un-solvent-welded solvent-weld fittings did come apart if one touched them, and it did go, unsupported, into a hole bodged into the WC multiquick and sealed with silicone but it could have worked.
Kind of.
Just about.
Amazingly the gas pipework seems to be all OK - up to size, joints soldered etc. Maybe that bit was done by the organ grinder himself?
Are those pipes still in good condition? Looks not.
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Tampa? Isn't that somewhere in the arsehole of Amerikkka where white vigilantes murder black teenagers whilst the police shrug and walk on by? And that would have what relevance, exactly, to a blog post on boiler installations in the UK?
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