
Originally Posted by
cookiemonster8
Sorry about the not knowing the plumber's vernacular, but, a washout is when you connect a shower or Lavatory close to the bend in the toilet to act as an additional wash of the drain besides the flush. I do want to install all three fixtures in my room - Lavatory sink, toilet, and shower. If I connect the 2" vent, the 2" shower, and the 2" Lavatory sink all with 4X2X4 sewage tees to a to a 4" toilet drain all PVC and then connect the 4" toilet drain line to a 4X4X3 which I would connect to 4" cast iron long radius 90 degree elbow which after a few feet leaves my house. I would use a bury-able grade "Fernco" connection to marry the PVC and Cast Iron. then above ground I would remove the Cast Iron 3" pipe and clean-out plug fitting and replace it with PVC. I will try to leave the Cast Iron connections above and I am hoping the PVC when put in place with another fernco will support the Cast Iron above. Do you think that will work or should I use cast Iron? I will not use lead and don't really want to use Cast Iron because I only have a Sawzall to cut the Cast Iron although I could rent a cutting tool. What do you think I should use?The trap I was talking about was for the shower and would be buried.
Good morning cookie,
Nice try with the " washout" but substituting washout for unvented fixture ain't going to git it! Plus the toilet doesn't need any help draining.
You're confusing me a little more when I attempt to figure you existing set up. Normally you would figure a tees measurements to run like it's sitting in front of you but in plumber language that's not the case.
A tee is measured like this. First the straight run. Then the branch. So a 4" tee with 3" opening in the middle would go down like this, (4X4X3) (Don'tv feel bad, some plumbers have difficulty withthis.
Since I'm not sure how you configured your tees I'm having a little problem trying to visualize your setup.
Having got your first lesson in plumbing 101 we'll now go into vents and revents. I figured out you tied into the 3" vent upstairs with a 3X3X2 tee, (for a vent this tee must be inverted, (turned upside down) and stubbed 2" down to the basement to vent the future basement group. You say the 3" vent goes straight out the roof but is there anything else draining into that 3" vent above where you cut in the 3X3X2" tee?
"If I connect the 2" vent, the 2" shower, and the 2" Lavatory sink all with 4X2X4 sewage tees to a to a 4" toilet drain all PVC and then connect the 4" toilet drain line to a 4X4X3 which I would connect to 4" cast iron long radius 90 degree elbow which after a few feet leaves my house."
I'm not able to visualize the above lay out but I may have a simpler way that will take less fittings and be a lot more legal. But first if you're ploaning in cutting cast iron with a Saws-All lay in a good supply of blades and be prepared to to dull down a lot of them. Cast iron's very hard. We use a set of cast iron snap cutters for pipe that's horizontal and a set of ratchet cutters for vertical pipe. Since you'll be cutting into the horizontal 4" under the floor a set of snap cutters will be all you need.
Try this on for size;
Leave the 4" long sweep elbo, ( see you're learning new terms already) alone and cut a 4" cast iron No-Hub tee into the main to pick up; the toilet. Using No-Hub Bands to tie the tee in to the main. At this time you will convert to 4" PVC using a No-Hub Band.
Now, somewhere along the 4" run from the main to the toilet cut in a PVC 4X2" wye or a combination 4X2" Wye and Eighth bend, (combo, More new words) to pick up the lavatory and in that 2" run to the lavatory cut in a 2" wye or combo to pick up the shower.
Continue the 2" lavatory run to where you wish the vanity or lav to position. Turn up in the wall with a PVC 2" short sweep or DWV elbo and extend up 17 1/2" to the center of a 2X2X1 1/2" tee and stub the branch out to pick up the trap from the lavatory. The top of the tee will connect the PVC coming out of it with a 2" No-Hub Band to the 2" cast iron you've already stubbed down for a vent.
This way your lavatory will be vented and the shower and toilet will be wet vented and everybody will be happy. Sound like a plan? Tom