I am not in the building trade, so please excuse my lack of knowledge/terminology.
One of the rainwater downpipes from our roof is discharging onto the pitched roof of our ground floor extension. Our neighbour recently told us that this rainwater is actually coming so fast that it misses the guttering on the first floor roof and splashes over it.
The post and photo here seem similar to my situation:
https://diy.stackexchange.com/questions/71585/how-to-prevent-heavy-rainwater-from-jumping-the-gutter
That seems to be an American house. In my case our rainwater pipes are FloPlast 68mm round and our roof tiles are Marley concrete plain roof tiles.
I am not sure what to do. I like the solution suggested on StackExchange, but my rainwater pipes are round and I do not know how I would secure the pipe that runs down the pitched roof. Is there a product in the UK to secure a round pipe like this to roof tiles?
Another idea, suggested here (for a different problem), is to make L brackets with lead as a way of slowing down the water.
I am not sure what to do here, or whether I speak to a roofer or a plumber.
One of the rainwater downpipes from our roof is discharging onto the pitched roof of our ground floor extension. Our neighbour recently told us that this rainwater is actually coming so fast that it misses the guttering on the first floor roof and splashes over it.
The post and photo here seem similar to my situation:
https://diy.stackexchange.com/questions/71585/how-to-prevent-heavy-rainwater-from-jumping-the-gutter
That seems to be an American house. In my case our rainwater pipes are FloPlast 68mm round and our roof tiles are Marley concrete plain roof tiles.
I am not sure what to do. I like the solution suggested on StackExchange, but my rainwater pipes are round and I do not know how I would secure the pipe that runs down the pitched roof. Is there a product in the UK to secure a round pipe like this to roof tiles?
Another idea, suggested here (for a different problem), is to make L brackets with lead as a way of slowing down the water.
I am not sure what to do here, or whether I speak to a roofer or a plumber.