I’m doing a similar job for other reasons and my repair collar is on one side but I cannot move it. Tried heating it with hot water but still no move. Any suggestions apart from hitting it more?
Doing my share of ground work and machine driving I permanently keep a metre or so of 4 " underground a couple of slip couplers and a couple of clay to pvc gaiters along with a length of 25 and 20mm mdpe a couple of straight couplers for each and a couple of philmac universal transition fittings along with a squeeze and stop tap key. £100 of bits but no stress if I do hit something and no matter how careful you are it happens now and again and usually 3pm on a Friday!!!
Ah mate, you think you had a problem with a drain lol, our nee video goes out today at 2pm, I hope you get a chance to see if because we gave our customer a new waterfall feature for a couple hours! Those bloody drains are no joke!!
you ain't digging enough if you don't hit a pipe now and then, they are slip collars you have but you can use normal collars with the internal lip just takes a bit of time knocking the internal lip of 👍
Is there a small step where the new pipe meets the old pipe inside the sleeve? If so, could this cause any problems like a build up of waste over time?
Very helpful... Thanks 4 your time to make this video..
Glad it was helpful! 👍🏴
Thank you Sir, you saved my day 👍👍👍
Glad to hear that makes it all worth it 👍🏴
Thanks very much. Very clear and concise.
Glad it was helpful! 👍🏴
I’m doing a similar job for other reasons and my repair collar is on one side but I cannot move it. Tried heating it with hot water but still no move. Any suggestions apart from hitting it more?
Did you use a lubricant? to help it slide
you can knock the centre out of a normal collar to make a "slip collar" with a screwdriver and save some money :)
Didn’t know you could I’ll remember that 👍🏴
We all do it mate , good job putting right again
Typical Friday afternoon just about to leave brake the pipe 👍🏴
Doing my share of ground work and machine driving I permanently keep a metre or so of 4 " underground a couple of slip couplers and a couple of clay to pvc gaiters along with a length of 25 and 20mm mdpe a couple of straight couplers for each and a couple of philmac universal transition fittings along with a squeeze and stop tap key.
£100 of bits but no stress if I do hit something and no matter how careful you are it happens now and again and usually 3pm on a Friday!!!
Lol I think I hit that one about the same time gav e me a excuse to show people how to fix em 👍🏴
Ah mate, you think you had a problem with a drain lol, our nee video goes out today at 2pm, I hope you get a chance to see if because we gave our customer a new waterfall feature for a couple hours! Those bloody drains are no joke!!
just watched it and yeh don’t think the customers wanted a waterfall. good luck with the channel just subscribed 👍🏴
@@tidybrickslandscaping no I don’t think they did lol, thanks buddy means a lot! Keep up your good content!!
Where I can buy those couples??
Local builders merchants 👍🏴
These are called slip collars?
Yes sorry for delay 👍🏴
you ain't digging enough if you don't hit a pipe now and then, they are slip collars you have but you can use normal collars with the internal lip just takes a bit of time knocking the internal lip of 👍
Friday afternoon hit a pipe bloody typical 🏴👍
Should use rubber connections less effort 😉 nice vid 👍
Thanks Brendan yeah lots of ways just happened go that way used what I had at hand 👍🏴
Is there a small step where the new pipe meets the old pipe inside the sleeve? If so, could this cause any problems like a build up of waste over time?
Try keep it as tight as possible but the sleeve will keep everything together 👍🏴
3:26 you should have slipped the two collars on the middle section first
Same result either way 👍🏴
Fix a 4 inch pipe? You don't need a 5 min video for that. Just break up with him. That took 5 seconds MAX.. ;)
😆
Shouldn't this be glued?
I need for glue just a good rubber seal 👍🏴