Ask Experts Questions for FREE Help !
Ask
    WellerEE's Avatar
    WellerEE Posts: 2, Reputation: 1
    New Member
     
    #1

    Nov 23, 2008, 10:50 PM
    Vent Info
    I am having a bathroom added to the third floor of an old Victorian home. The bathroom will have a shower, sink and toilet. The room is situated between two existing vents, but because this is basically an attic floor, I think they may be too low to be used by this new bath. They are so low that I believe the sink trap will be in line with the penetration.

    How high does the roof penetration need to be in comparison to the drain?
    massplumber2008's Avatar
    massplumber2008 Posts: 12,832, Reputation: 1212
    Senior Plumbing Expert
     
    #2

    Nov 24, 2008, 04:04 AM
    Hi Weller...

    Vents need to connect into vent stack at 6 inches above the flood level rim of the highest fixture being served on a particular floor. In this case, as in most, the lavatory will be the highest fixture so you can at a MINIMUM connect into the stack vent or penetrate the roof at 42" off the finish floor. All other vents (if any) will connect into this vent and pitch back toward the plumbing so rain water can drain back to the plumbing system.

    Sink drain/ptrap cannot be in-line with the roof penetration as drain could get blocked and instead of showing up as a clogged drain it would simply overflow into the vent and out the roof! That make sense?

    For a bathroom on the 3rd floor you will most likely only need 1-2" WET VENT. This wet vent will come from the toilet pipe and will pick up the shower drain as it runs by to pick up the lavatory. The pipe will then pick up the sink and run full size 2" up the wall and out the roof.


    Let us know if need more info. Here...

    MARK

Not your question? Ask your question View similar questions

 

Question Tools Search this Question
Search this Question:

Advanced Search

Add your answer here.


Check out some similar questions!

Attic vent and vent pipe leaks through roof [ 7 Answers ]

Hello: I have water leaking down through the attic vents and white PVC vent pipes. What is the best way to repair these leaks? Can repairs be made from inside the attic? Should the vents be replaced (they are plastic)? Thank you!:(

Laundry Pump vent hookup. How? - no vent access [ 9 Answers ]

I have a Laundry Tray Pump System connected to my wash tub in my fifteen year old townhome's basement. I was recently informed that it was not properly installed because I never connected the vent pipe from the pump. I had some one look at it and was told that the house's vent system (which...

Replacing flue vent with type-B vent [ 2 Answers ]

Hi, I have a gas furnace that is currently vented horizontally out the foundation wall of the basement. The flue pipe is single-walled pipe. A 5-ft section of the pipe goes through a stud wall, but the home owner left only 1" clearance. I want to replace only that section with Type B...

What to do about a new studer vent that still pushes water from vent top [ 2 Answers ]

I have just installed a new studer vent that is above counter top ( w stainless cap). The drain is coming form the dish washer and up to the vent and supposedly to the outer drain, but some of the water backs up into the drain and I have to cut the dish washer off . Why is this happening

Vent diagram - does this meet code (see pic)? Vent runs below actual drain [ 4 Answers ]

The schematic below should make it clear the configuration I would like to use. Basically, I would like to keep the vent under the floor for a little ways, so it pops up in a better location. I cannot easily move the 2" drain location going down and would rather not go straight up from the...


View more questions Search