Fidodie
New Member
I'm staring at a picture of a horizontal wet vent figures 9.13 & 9.14 in the 2003 intl plumbing code book - here is a link - i'm 95% sure that is what we uses as of last year sometime. this example is a back-to-back bath group (terminology check?) with a single vent - it looks wet, and it looks horizontal....
Is it now up to the local code to "allow" this? I have a situation where i'm working close to a joist and would like to keep the plumbing running down one bay - so a vertical vent without a large notch in a joist might be difficult - the lav vent is in the next joist bay, it is back-to-back with a laundry room sink (more kitchen type than slop sink)
summary: 2" vent - shower t'd into vertical - meets downstream of w.c. at 3x3x2 wye, turned up 45deg. clean-out upstream of w.c. 3" wye. I have room to work - 12" joist, and not much in the way electric-wise - although i may have to work around the hot-water heat loops.
thanks as alway -
Is it now up to the local code to "allow" this? I have a situation where i'm working close to a joist and would like to keep the plumbing running down one bay - so a vertical vent without a large notch in a joist might be difficult - the lav vent is in the next joist bay, it is back-to-back with a laundry room sink (more kitchen type than slop sink)
summary: 2" vent - shower t'd into vertical - meets downstream of w.c. at 3x3x2 wye, turned up 45deg. clean-out upstream of w.c. 3" wye. I have room to work - 12" joist, and not much in the way electric-wise - although i may have to work around the hot-water heat loops.
thanks as alway -