A bathroom sink is a lavatory, the toilet is a closet, and a tub is a tub. That's just the way we talk!
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Any 'image referenced previous to posting 13 is now out of date). I think at the moment the general consensus is posting no 13 (images ) are the way to go with a few mods re salesdog and the input of redwood.
thanks this is getting exciting now! i wonder if terry love will join in the debate![]()
Last edited by novicepiper; 05-03-2008 at 01:49 PM.
A bathroom sink is a lavatory, the toilet is a closet, and a tub is a tub. That's just the way we talk!
I am by no means any kind of artist as you are, but here is a simple layout that may help. Check your local codes for sizing of your vents. In my area we can vent an entire bathroom with 1 1/2" pipe
The Drawing below shows the wash basin drain and the tub drain wet venting the toilet
Thanks for the input Krow - if everyone agrees on your sketch thats what I'll do.... I just presented my images the way i did cos i thought it would be really easy for you plumbers to understand (solid visual) rather than me try and mess about with a sketch on a knapkin or something - ill do a quick 3d layout of your proposal and post it back up later tonight.
Thanks again Krow - your explanation re sketch is cool with me - I just needed someone to explain it with a visual cos i dont know all the tech stuff hence (what the hell is a lav) explained by jimbo.
Novice piper
Ps - I think thats what Redwood was saying!?
Last edited by novicepiper; 05-03-2008 at 05:37 PM.
Thanks to Krows drawing ( page 1) - your input now makes perfect sense - i will update the image ( on page 1 ) and let you all see it to check it out - im in canada so if anyone from canada could set me straight on the vent size that would be cool.
thanks again Novice piper
Last edited by novicepiper; 05-03-2008 at 09:24 PM.
Run your toilet back to the wall then vent it kind of like this...Hope you can see this.The toilet vent can be 2" If your waste is 4" that is fine.You had no sizing on your waste and vents.1 1/2 for your tub and lav (Uhhh sink.)waste, 1 1/4 for your tub and sink vents until they connect with the toilet vent.Could you post a pic. of the room and maybe the space below?
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Last edited by bombjay; 05-03-2008 at 11:21 PM. Reason: D'oh!
could you send a larger pic if poss - i cant read your dims. I thought i had listed every pipe dim in the room via the left top coloured dots (4", 3" 2", 1.5"). I thought the layout was complete! as is re last image posting ------ please bare in mind, this is all done at the computer at the mo. the only pipe in that room at the mo is the main blue stack running vertical and then offset underground exactly as on image
Thanks for your input - really appreciated Bombjay.
PS The image is to scale in everyway I will update the image and include all measurements
ROOM DIMENSIONS = 118" (9' 8") X 63" (5' 2") and 18" depth below ground level.
Last edited by novicepiper; 05-04-2008 at 08:23 AM. Reason: room dimensions
What software do you use for those gorgeous drawings? If it could transform back and forth from 3D to the standard plumbing drawing format (like Krow did -- it's got a name but I forget what it is), that would be great.
Are you a novice piper as in plumbing, or as in piping?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C-D6iI_3LHE
(This gets good about 1:20 into the clip. Who ever would have thought of harmonizing guitar and bagpipe?).
Mikey
Also a novice piper... (that's not me in the clip)
Thanks for the vid - im neither a bag pipe player or plumber i just can sweat pipes and glue abs pipes together... that certainly does not qualify me for either as i dont know the theory behind venting, is it supposed to suck air in or act as a release for frontal air force and push air out of the way of on coming waste - i thought it was both - but I am probably sort of incorrect maybe.
i do like the bag pipes and the guitar though - so thats acdc then - thats a first for me
software 3d max - no idea what the software your talking about re schematics & 3d in one - if you find out let me know please
thanks novicepiper
Last edited by novicepiper; 05-04-2008 at 06:26 AM.
The main reason for venting (combined with fixture traps) is to prevent the infiltration of sewer gas (it's as bad as it sounds) into the living space.
Imagine a fixture like a sink with a straight pipe going into a sewer. With no water in the drain pipe, the gases generated in the sewer have a clear path into the house. This would be bad. If you've ever used an outhouse or port-a-potty on a hot day, you have only a slight inkling of how bad it can be -- like fatal
.
So, the sink (and all other fixtures as well) have those "trap" thingies in their drains to keep (trap) a small puddle of water in them, sealing the pipe from the sewer. Toilets have a trap built in to the bowl -- a large part of the water used in the flush goes to refill the trap with nice clean water after all the poop has been washed downstream.
However, if an upstream neighbor or fixture let go a large discharge, that frontal air pressure you mentioned might push the trapped water aside and burble sewer gas up into the sink. Bad. Or, when you drain the sink, or when any large slug of water going goes down the drain downstream from the sink, a low-pressure situation could be created and siphon the trap, draining enough water to destroy the seal. Bad
.
The vent system allows all the traps to remain in a pressure-neutral state, and not be siphoned, maintaining the seal. Good (big-grin smiley intended here, but prohibited by the system, which I just found out is limited to 4 images per message).
Last edited by Mikey; 05-04-2008 at 06:40 AM.
Last edited by novicepiper; 05-04-2008 at 07:24 AM.
So as i understand: and please correct me if im wrong
1) large discharge of water from above could create positive pressure and push air through a p trap below - resulting in bubbles and poopy smells?
2) large discharge of water from below could create negative pressure (vacuum) and suck air from a p trap above - resulting in siphoning and poopy smells?
please see my little diagram-
Q1) whats stops A and B from having positive and negative pressure on the kitchen sink?
Q2) Will C affect any of the above floors?
thanks novicepiper
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