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  • The Drainage System: Drain Waste-Vent System
  • From "Blueprint for Home Building"
    episode DBHB-202


    PHOTO

    Figure A
    There are two important things involved with plumbing: drain waste and vent piping. In this segment host Jeff Wilson takes a look at the system that takes the water away from your home.

    The distribution piping is the system that brought the water to the toilet bowl and the drain waste-vent system (figure A) transports all the used water and waste from the house to the sewer or septic system. A house's sewer system basically works on gravity. Everything goes down in other words. Today the piping is generally PVC as opposed to galvanized caste iron, which clogged much easier, in the past.

    When the waste water leaves the bowl, it descends down the drain and enters the waste line. To allow gravity to move the waste water, there are certain drainage specifications devised to go with the flow. Supply lines are fitted with 45- or 90-degree angles. Waste fittings, however, require larger angles with more sweeping bends.

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    PHOTO

    Figure B
    PHOTO

    Figure C
    PHOTO

    Figure D
    An important component of drainage is a piping system called the "venting system," which consists of pipes (figure B) that allow gasses to escape. The venting system also relieves air pressure so waste water can drain properly. If you've noticed several pipes sticking up through the roofs of houses, those are vent pipes on the waste lines, required by code to prevent drawing the water out the traps that are under the sinks. These vents are a component of the drainage system.

    Note: There are products on the market such as air-admittance vents (figure C) that will fit under your sink, which will draw a bit of air in from under the sink while preventing any sewer gasses from coming out. These vents are great for two purposes: 1) they reduce the amount of waste line vent stacks that you run, which saves money, and 2) they reduce the number of penetrations through your roof.

    At this point you've followed the drainage system from the faucets down through the house, and now the waste water pipes are ready to be tied into the sewer line. The plumber installs the "house trap," which keeps the waste and odors flowing out of the home, and the "lateral line" (figure D), which ties the house to the municipal sewer lines. Every house has a lateral that goes into a sewer system that goes down the street, collects through a main distribution line and goes to a sewer processing plant.

    Note: Sewage moves by gravity, which means the sewage lines coming into the house need to be higher than where they go to connect to the city sewer line. To make the connection from your home to the public sewer, you need to find out from your civil engineer where the sewers are. You'll want to have at least a minimum of two or three percent fall or you're going to be in a pump situation. The amount of fall in your sewer system is going to depend upon what your elevation of the home is and what the elevation of the city connection location is. The fall for the drain waste-vent system is 1/4-inch per foot, which carries fluids through the sewage system. The lateral should be two degrees, which means you have a four-inch pipe with a 1/4-inch fall, going into a six-inch sewer lateral that results in a two-degree fall into the main line.

    In the final segment you'll find out what to do if you're new home is in an area where municipalities aren't available. The alternative is a septic system.


    GUESTS :

    Michael Morse
    Journeyman Plumber
    Pedicone Plumbing
    4364 Gibsonia Rd.
    Rt. 910
    Gibsonia, PA 15044
    Phone: 724-443-6794

    Dana Bres
    Research Engineer
    US Department of Housing and Urban Development
    451 7th St., SW
    Washington, DC 20910
    Phone: 202-708-4370
    E-mail: dana_b._bres@hud.gov

    Jack Tucker
    Building Wisdom
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    Joe Meringolo
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    Fred Samuels
    Homeowner
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    Rockwood, TN 37854
    Phone: 865-354-0477

    Terry Malloy
    General Contractor
    7035 Woodrow Wilson Dr.
    Phone: 619-992-8139

    Al Sain
    Homeowner
    7117 Fairway Dr.
    Butler, PA 16001
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    E-mail: alsain@zbzoom.net

    Bob Cheney
    Plumbing Expert
    2153 Iron Club Dr.
    La Verne, CA 91750
    Phone: 909-593-0438
    E-mail: deache@adelphia.net

    Kathleen Yates
    Group Product Manager
    Moen Inc.
    25300 Al Moen Dr.
    E-mail: kyates@moen.com

    Don Jones
    Construction Consultant
    E-mail: Nietsche2000@yahoo.com

    Carl Latimer
    Journeyman Plumber
    Pedicone Plumbing
    331 Virginia Ave.
    Ellwood, PA 16117

    Lynn Underwood
    Homeowner
    3001 E. Wiley Lane
    Vail, AZ 85641
    E-mail: whiskey5alpha@yahoo.com

    Elizabeth Shanahan
    President
    FC Construction, Inc.
    PO Box TT
    Newport Beach, CA 92662
    Phone: 714-412-6180
    E-mail: FCConstruction@earthlink.net

    Dennis Fowler
    Inspector
    Cranberry Township
    717 Skyview Dr.
    Cranberry TWP, PA 16066
    Phone: 724-772-2056

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