Shower Drain P-trap Depth?

Users who are viewing this thread

Fightintxag

Mech Engineer
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Location
Fort Worth, TX
This may belong in the shower/bath forum. Feel free to move it if necessary.

I'm remodeling my master bath. As part of this bath redo, the shower will be expanded. The old shower floor is recessed in the slab. So in order to change the shower footprint, I'll have to bring the recess up to level. That means the shower drain's riser will be extended up another 6" or so.

I chipped up the concrete to extend the riser and replace the shower drain (going to use the kerdi drain and membrane) and saw that I have a cast iron riser. After seeing a lot of suggestions that it'd be wise to replace the cast iron p-trap with pvc while I have the concrete busted up, I decided to do that. I finally uncovered the p-trap about 3' below the drain. Here's a couple images:
untitled.jpg

100_0611.jpg

You can see 2 horizontal and 1 vertical connection of some sort (the pipe flares out and there's a rubber ring that normal 2" diameter pipe come out of). I'm planning to cut the pipe between the 2 horizontal fittings and transition to pvc using a no-hub.

After extending the riser, I'm looking at the p-trap being 3'6" or so below the shower drain.

Question 1Is there any problem with my plan to cut the pipe and reconnect pvc using the no-hub in the area between those 2 horizontal couplings?

Question 2Is there a problem with having the shower p-trap 3'6" or so below the drain? Seems awfully deep to me, but I never had any issues with the old setup 3' below the drain.

Question 3If the answer to Question 1 is "yes, there is a problem", what should I do? Should I jog the horizontal pipe up with elbows so that the p-trap is shallower than the original is?

Thanks,
Scott
 
Last edited:

Kelly

Builder/Remodeler
Messages
22
Reaction score
0
Points
1
Location
Boerne, Texas
Website
www.johnbridge.com
C'mon, one of you sure-nuff plumbers, help this fella out, wouldja?

He's a good and valued member of the John Bridge Tile Your World forums and is really needin' to get to work on his tile if he can get this nasty hole covered up.

Or y'all can come look at his thread here and post your comments.

Thanks, you know we'd do the same for your customers, eh? :)

CX
 

Terry

The Plumbing Wizard
Staff member
Messages
29,942
Reaction score
3,459
Points
113
Location
Bothell, Washington
Website
terrylove.com
I would extend the drain straight out to the new p-trap using the no-hub couping.

If you use fittings to raise the line, you create an S-trap, which does not work right.

3'6" if really too high for the riser, but it's better than creating the S-trap.

If there is a way to add a vent to the line before the p-trap and have a shorter vertical, that would be best.

That would more than likely mean breaking out more concrete to keep the vent in the wall when you raise the entire line.
The pipe coming from the vent can raise on a 2% grade, but not with fittings.

Oh, and lose the water fittings and use waste fittings.
 

Fightintxag

Mech Engineer
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Location
Fort Worth, TX
Stinky Shower Drain

Ok, so I got my bathroom all finished up. But if the shower goes unused for a few days, the house begins to smell funky and it seems to be worse in the shower stall.

I'm pretty confident that my new P-trap isn't leaking.

The old P-trap was ~3'-6" deep, so I set the new one that same depth. Now my shower heads come out of the ceiling (instead of the wall) so the water is falling a greater distance (~8' instead of 6') before hitting the drain with greater velocity. Then you have the water shooting down the riser a good 3'-6" more. This is the same as before, but the inside of the new PVC is much smoother than the old CI (especially with the 30+years of buildup). Finally the PVC P-trap has a much more gentle bends than the old CI one did. If you look at the pictures above you can see how tight the CI P-trap bends were. There was actually CI webbing connecting the two vertical parts of the U in the P-trap.

I think all of this is conspiring to make the water shoot right on through the P-trap, and it's not staying full. What can I do? Is there some sort of baffle I can put in the riser that will slow the water without causing back-up issues?
 

Randyj

Master Plumber
Messages
1,060
Reaction score
2
Points
36
Location
Alabama
Fightintxag said:
I think all of this is conspiring to make the water shoot right on through the P-trap, and it's not staying full. What can I do? Is there some sort of baffle I can put in the riser that will slow the water without causing back-up issues?

This is what I'm thinking is happening. Somehow the water is not staying in the trap to keep the air sealed out... which is the basic flaw of S-traps. I've never seen one in normal residential plumbing but in commercial plumbing I've see lots of trap primers. This is a funky device which attaches to the cold water line at (usually at it's highest point and mounted vertically). A line runs from the primer to the trap. Every time there is a quick change in water pressure it gives a little squirt in the trap to keep it full of water. Something like this could be your solution unless you want to pour a cup of water in your shower drain every day or two to replace any evaporated water. I'm suspecting that your drain water has too high a velocity and is over running the trap leaving it unsealed. You might try some insert or a finer screen in your drain to slow the flow but as you said it may cause your drain to back up and to clog.
 

Fightintxag

Mech Engineer
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Location
Fort Worth, TX
Somehow the water is not staying in the trap to keep the air sealed out... which is the basic flaw of S-traps.
I thought I kept the P-trap deep per Terry's suggestion to avoid an S-trap?
I've never seen one in normal residential plumbing but in commercial plumbing I've see lots of trap primers. This is a funky device which attaches to the cold water line at (usually at it's highest point and mounted vertically). A line runs from the primer to the trap. Every time there is a quick change in water pressure it gives a little squirt in the trap to keep it full of water. Something like this could be your solution unless you want to pour a cup of water in your shower drain every day or two to replace any evaporated water.
Oh my. With my slab foundation and newly tiled shower, I'm not sure this trap primer is something I want to undertake.

Furthermore my job is forcing me to relocate and as of Dec 11, my home will become a rental property. Not sure I can count on the tenant to maintain the water level in that trap by carefully pouring cups of water down the drain on a regular basis.
I'm suspecting that your drain water has too high a velocity and is over running the trap leaving it unsealed. You might try some insert or a finer screen in your drain to slow the flow but as you said it may cause your drain to back up and to clog.
That's what I'm thinking is happening too. Right now there's not really any screen per say. There's just the grate that's provided with the drain (Kerdi drain). It looks like this:
P1.jpg

Could I put a mesh screen material or something underneath the grate to try to slow the water down? Could I somehow get that lower in the drain riser so it slows the water down closer to the P-trap? Of course it'll need to be removable in case of clogs wherever it is. Has anybody done something like this before?
 
R

Rancher

Guest
P trap depth

I plumbed a P trap 2'-3' below the drain and the only thing I notice is that it's loud when the water is trickling down the drain, if I had to do it over I would plumb it within 6" of the drain.

Rancher
 

Fightintxag

Mech Engineer
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Location
Fort Worth, TX
I plumbed a P trap 2'-3' below the drain and the only thing I notice is that it's loud when the water is trickling down the drain,
Yup. Mine is pretty loud too - the trickling sound seems to echo and resonate in the drain riser.
 

Randyj

Master Plumber
Messages
1,060
Reaction score
2
Points
36
Location
Alabama
Sorry... I didn't mean to confuse your design with an S-trap... I was merely pointing out "why" an s-trap is not a good idea. Not only does the velocity wash out the water which is meant to seal it but also the water exiting the down side can siphon water out of the trap weir (bottom of the trap).
 

Fightintxag

Mech Engineer
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Location
Fort Worth, TX
So are there any other options aside from tearing up the shower floor and slab in order to install a primer or make an S-trap with vent?

At this point I'm leaning towards putting some mesh screen under the grate to see if that'll slow the water down some. Are there any other options for reducing the water velocity? I don't suppose their are off the shelf baffles for this kind of thing?
 

Randyj

Master Plumber
Messages
1,060
Reaction score
2
Points
36
Location
Alabama
NO S-TRAP! Don't have a clue about any baffles to be purchased. If you're gonna tear up the floor to fix it just raise the P-trap and put some distance between it and a 90 to turn it back down so as to avoid the effect of an s-trap.... I'd only guess at 12" or more, but all the distance you can get so air can break at the top and release enough water to run back into the trap to seal it...at a minimum give it a few inches of flat pipe at the top before turning back down.
 

Geniescience

Homeowner
Messages
2,137
Reaction score
4
Points
0
Location
humid summers hot, humid winters cold
facts first

scott

could be good to tell us as much as you know. I will be glad to give you some good ideas on how to diagnose your problem, isolate the diagnosis from other options, and then figure out a way to fix it or "work around" it. Later. Facts first please.

the main hypothesis is that something is sucking your p-trap water out, at least enough to let bad air move back up the drain ... (right? y/n)

Where is the closest vent. downstream? how far?
what else is on this branch? what else connects to it before the stack?
did anything else change in the plumbing in the house in the last year?
Etc. What else is there to know that is not covered above?

Then, the 2nd thing to do is to verify that it really is the p trap seal that is "in play" here. Later.

david
 

Randyj

Master Plumber
Messages
1,060
Reaction score
2
Points
36
Location
Alabama
Genie... you are correct... I had assumed that the vent was adequate and in play working as it should.
 

hj

Master Plumber
Messages
33,602
Reaction score
1,041
Points
113
Location
Cave Creek, Arizona
Website
www.terrylove.com
drain

Pour some water in the drain and measure down to the water level. Then take a normal shower and measure again after you get done. If the level is the same the problem is not the 3'6" riser.
 

Fightintxag

Mech Engineer
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Location
Fort Worth, TX
Resolution

Well, I tried measuring the water depth in the P-trap, and nothing I did (slowly pouring water down the drain versus running the shower) seemed to make a difference. The P-trap was staying full regardless.

So then I got nervous that maybe I had done something to mess up the main vent stack that runs in one of the walls shared by the shower. I began to worry that a drywall screw or something may be causing it to leak gases into the wall, and then those gases were coming out around the shower valve and into the shower stall.

So I called a real plumber. He found that I'd managed to do a poor job setting the toilet, and that was the source of the smell. $90 later the problem is all gone. I still don't understand why the smell was sooo much more concentrated in the shower if the toilet (which is outside the shower stall) was the source. The plumber didn't really have a good explanation either. But all seems well now anyway.
 

hj

Master Plumber
Messages
33,602
Reaction score
1,041
Points
113
Location
Cave Creek, Arizona
Website
www.terrylove.com
smell

The odor was in the entire room, but air circulation would dilute it and move most of it out into the rest of the house, but the shower does not usually get much air flow so the odor builds up in it and stays there.
 
Top
Hey, wait a minute.

This is awkward, but...

It looks like you're using an ad blocker. We get it, but (1) terrylove.com can't live without ads, and (2) ad blockers can cause issues with videos and comments. If you'd like to support the site, please allow ads.

If any particular ad is your REASON for blocking ads, please let us know. We might be able to do something about it. Thanks.
I've Disabled AdBlock    No Thanks