- Hang a plumb bob from the outlet to the drain to use as a guide while you draw several marks on the wall with a pencil to show you where the downpipe will run.
- Join the marks up with a straight edge, creating a line to show where the centre of the downpipe will be.
- Position a downpipe clip at the top of wall, in the centre of the pencil line. Mark the position of its fixing holes on the wall. If you need an offset bend, put a downpipe clip directly below the bend.
- Repeat the process down the wall. Make sure there is no more than 1.8 metres between pipe clips.
- Refer to the guttering manufacturer’s instructions to see which drill bit is required. Use a drill to drill the fixing holes and insert wall plugs.
- Fit the first piece of downpipe starting from the outlet and moving towards the drain.
- If you need to add more downpipe, join the two pieces with a pipe socket and clip. Leave a 10mm gap between the end of the pipe and the bottom of the pipe socket, because it will probably expand. Then attach a pipe clip over the joint.
- Continue attaching pipe clips down the length of the downpipe.
- If you need to, fit a downpipe show to direct the water into the drain. Attach a downpipe clip directly below the socket of the shoe.
Forsinard
Forsinard is a district in the county of Sutherland in the Highland location of Scotland. It lies on the A897 road in Strath Halladale. It is offered by a railway on the Far North Line. The neighborhood hotel closed numerous years ago, but there is now a b & b simply across the level going across. Forsinard is located in the Flow Country, an area of peat bog which straddles the boundaries of Caithness and also Sutherland. The 13,000-hectare (33,000-acre) Fosinard estate was bought in 1977 by Basil Baird. The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds runs a 154 km2 (38,000-acre) nature get as well as a visitor centre at Forsinard. The Forsinard Flows national nature get attracts a large range of birds and wild animals.