2 Attachment(s)
DWV Configuration Question
Good day all, I hope somebody can offer a quick piece of advice. I had my very first plumbing inspection this morning, and the inspector told me I'd have a problem venting two basement fixtures with the configuration I had.
I'm attaching drawings to illustrate.
So, he said with what I have now, the basement sink would not vent properly via the roof vent that extends from the kitchen sink. He said I'd need a studor vent for it, and another one for the washer.
But then he said something about the kitchen waste connecting "below" the connection point for the basement sink. I asked him what that meant but he simply said it again, that the waste needs to connect below the vent point. He was in a hurry and I thought I understood, but now that I've drawn it out, I'm not so sure.
Does this mean the T connection for the basement sink should be below its studor valve height? Does anyone know what he might mean? Can anyone look at my "proposed" drawing and see any flaws with it?
I really appreciate any help. As with any big city, contacting the inspector to ask for clarification is a bit difficult, if not impossible.
Thanks again,
James
DWV Configuration Question
[QUOTE=jamlove]Good day all, I hope somebody can offer a quick piece of advice. I had my very first plumbing inspection this morning, and the inspector told me I'd have a problem venting two basement fixtures with the configuration I had.
I'm attaching drawings to illustrate.
So, he said with what I have now, the basement sink would not vent properly via the roof vent that extends from the kitchen sink. He said I'd need a studor vent for it, and another one for the washer.
But then he said something about the kitchen waste connecting "below" the connection point for the basement sink. I asked him what that meant but he simply said it again, that the waste needs to connect below the vent point. He was in a hurry and I thought I understood, but now that I've drawn it out, I'm not so sure.
Does this mean the T connection for the basement sink should be below its studor valve height? Does anyone know what he might mean? Can anyone look at my "proposed" drawing and see any flaws with it?
I really appreciate any help. As with any big city, contacting the inspector to ask for clarification is a bit difficult, if not impossible.
Thanks again,
James
Good morning James,
With the possible exception of the "S" trap you have drawn for the utility sink in the "existing" drawing,( And I don't really think the sink is "S"trapped) I can see nothing wrong with the vents as they are. Is the utility sink really tied in lower then the washer? The two basement fixtures are vented by a vent that's washed down by the kitchen sink. In my area it would pass.
The inspector doesn't like the idea of the two basement fixtures being "wet vented" so he first wanted to add a mechanical vent to each of the basement fixtures. He then changed his mind and proposed that you rerun the kitchen drain to connect below the tie in point of the lowest basement fixture, allowing the washer and sink a individual vent. This would cause the kitchen sink to be revented back into the roof vent a foot over the flood rim of the kitchen sink. In my book that's lots of work to accomplish nothing that you didn't have before. A drainage system that's vented.
Unless your local codes call for each fixture to have its own vent,( pick up a copy of the local code at your building department) I would challenge the inspectors call. Please keep me in the loop in this matter. Yours is the kind of question I like to follow to the end. Regards, Tom