Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
gas pipe
Recently when attempting to put a fence up my husband damaged a gas pipe which Transco came and fixed and are now billing us �340 for it. The pipe was a plastic pipe and they changed a segment which was about a foot long, if that.
I would expect a plastic gas pipe to be buried quite far down but it's only about 6 inches down from the level of the house, is that acceptable? Is there anywhere I can find out some information or guidelines on the matter? The house is ex-council and the lady who owned it previously would not have altered the pipes, so it will have been put there by the council/Transco.
Thanks in advance for your help.
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Carolina. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.6 inches is far too high. If everyone who dug to that depth in their own gardens called there local authorities, no work would ever get done!
I think you need the New Roads and Street Works Act 1991 (unless a later act overides). From memory it said gas was 2 foot depth in the road, 1 1/2 foot in pavements and 1ft 2" in domestic properties. There were exceptions to this, but they were the norm.
Transco do own the majority of pipes in the country.
I agree 6 inches is probably a bit high (and also a number thats easy to use, rather than saying 8 or even 10) but as domestic pipes are very small it'd be daft to bury them too deeply.
On the other hand, they're bright yellow for this reason, and pretty resiliant..... it must've been a hard whack with that spade, especially for not knowing what was underneath.
curious as to why "a service detector can be hired from your local tool shop" when you originally state that they "will come out (free of cost) with their detection equipment".
None the less, I love the way you think everybody should call up their local companies everytime you need to dig a hole.
As I stated, if you are only diggina hole to 6" - 150mm, there should be no need to trouble anyone as nothing should be buried shallower than 375mm.
Yes there is a potential issue if your garden has been flattened, but unless it has been by almost a foot.......
....and even then, do you think that everyone who buries poor little sammy the hamster should dial up the local services in case he gets a pipe up his @rse?
your question reminds me of 2 years ago when we were laying laminate flooring in our dining room.last piece to go in needed a small screw to keep it in place.you can guess what happened next.straight through the main gas pipe.which was only 2inches under the concrete floor.it cost us �35 to get it repaired plus we had to pull up some of the laminate so the gas fitter could get at it.
not a good day.