Washing Machine Plumbin
Posted: Tue Jul 08, 2008 6:07 pm
Hi,
A few weeks ago I put in some new kitchen units and new taps etc. Ever since then my water has had a taste a bit like burnt cardboard. The waterboard chap asked me if I have a non-return valve where my washing machine inlet valve plumbs into the water supply to stop dirty washing machine water getting back into the water pipes and into the taps.
I'm pretty sure that I don't - I just have the one cold water inlet pipe plumbed onto the washing machine tap fitting under the sink. It has a filter/trap but I don't think there is any kind of a valve.
I have had a look around but I can't find anything that answers this kind of description - there are non-return valves for the washing machine waste, but not for the inlet.
Does anyone know anything about this? There is not much that has changed between the old plumbing and the new, just new taps, but the washing machine inlet pipe is at a higher level where it comes through the hole in the unit, than where it plumbs into the water supply, so I guess this could mean that water can back-flow into the pipes but I don't know enough about washing machines to know what effect this might have.
Any ideas?
Annie
A few weeks ago I put in some new kitchen units and new taps etc. Ever since then my water has had a taste a bit like burnt cardboard. The waterboard chap asked me if I have a non-return valve where my washing machine inlet valve plumbs into the water supply to stop dirty washing machine water getting back into the water pipes and into the taps.
I'm pretty sure that I don't - I just have the one cold water inlet pipe plumbed onto the washing machine tap fitting under the sink. It has a filter/trap but I don't think there is any kind of a valve.
I have had a look around but I can't find anything that answers this kind of description - there are non-return valves for the washing machine waste, but not for the inlet.
Does anyone know anything about this? There is not much that has changed between the old plumbing and the new, just new taps, but the washing machine inlet pipe is at a higher level where it comes through the hole in the unit, than where it plumbs into the water supply, so I guess this could mean that water can back-flow into the pipes but I don't know enough about washing machines to know what effect this might have.
Any ideas?
Annie