Goff Home Inspections checks
the water lines, drains and water tanks in every home. If there
is a problem where water stains are hidden or a small leak that
you have not seen these can cause big problems and a major expense
for repairs. A small leak not noticed and let go for a while
could cause wood rot, high water bills and much more.
Plumbing may be defined as practice, materials,
and fixtures used in the installation, maintenance, and alteration
of all piping, fixtures, appliances, and appurtenances in connection
with sanitary or storm drainage facilities, the venting system,
and the public or private water supply systems. Plumbing does
not include the trade of drilling water wells, installing water
softening equipment, or the business of manufacturing or selling
plumbing fixtures, appliances, equipment, or hardware. A plumbing
system consists of three separate parts: an adequate potable
water supply system, a safe, adequate drainage system and ample
fixtures and equipment.
Background Factors
The generalized inspection of a home is concerned
with a safe water supply system, an adequate drainage system,
and ample and proper fixtures and equipment. This explains features
of a residential plumbing system and the basic plumbing terms
the inspector must know and understand to identify properly housing
code violations involving plumbing and the more complicated defects
that he will refer to the appropriate agencies.
Main Features of an Indoor Plumbing
System
The primary functions of the plumbing system
within the house are as follows:
1. To bring an adequate and potable supply of hot and cold
water to the users of the dwelling.
2. To drain all waste water and sewage discharged from
these fixtures into the public sewer, or private disposal
system.
It is, therefore, very important that the
housing inspector familiarize himself fully with all elements
of these systems so that he may recognize inadequacies of the
structure's plumbing as well as other code violations.
Elements of a Plumbing System
Water Service
The piping of a house
service line should be as short as possible. Elbows and bends
should be kept to a minimum since these reduce the pressure
and therefore the supply of water to fixtures in the house.
The house service line should also be protected from freezing.
The burying of the line under 4 feet of soil is a commonly
accepted depth to prevent freezing. This depth varies, however,
across the country from north to south. The local or state
plumbing code should be consulted for the recommended depth
in your area of the country.
The materials used for a house service may
be copper, cast iron, steel or wrought iron. The connections
used should be compatible with the type of pipe used.
Corporation stop - The corporation
stop is connected to the water main. This connection is usually
made of brass and can be connected to the main by use of a special
tool without shutting off the municipal supply. The valve incorporated
in the corporation stop permits the pressure to be maintained
in the main while the service to the building is completed.
Curb stop -
The curb stop is a similar valve used to isolate the building
from the main for repairs, nonpayment of water bills, or flooded
basements. Since the corporation stop is usually under the street
and would necessitate breaking the pavement to reach the valve,
the curb stop is used as the isolation valve.
Curb stop box -
The curb stop box is an access box to the curb stop for opening
and closing the valve. A long-handled wrench is used to reach
the valve.
Meter stop -
The meter stop is a valve placed on the street side of the
water meter to isolate the meter for installation or maintenance.
Many codes require a gate valve on the house side of the meter
to shut off water for house plumbing repairs. The curb and
meter stops are not to be used frequently and can be ruined
in a short time if used very frequently.
Water meter - The water meter
is a device used to measure the amount of water used in the house.
It is usually the property of the city and is a very delicate
instrument that should not be abused. Since the electric system
is usually grounded to the water line, a grounding loop-device
should be installed around the meter. Many meters come with a
yoke that maintains electrical continuity even though the meter
is removed.
Hot and Cold Water Main Lines -
The hot and cold water main lines are usually hung from the basement
ceiling and are attached to the water meter and hot-water tank
on one side and the fixture supply risers on the other. These
pipes should be installed in a neat manner and should be supported
by pipe hangers or straps of sufficient strength and number to
prevent sagging. Hot and cold water lines should be approximately
6 inches apart unless the hot water line is insulated. This is
to insure that the cold water line does not pick up heat from
the hot water line. The supply mains should have a drain valve
or stop and waste valve in order to remove water from the system
for repairs. These valves should be on the low end of the line
or on the end of each fixture riser.
The fixture risers start at the basement main
and rise vertically to the fixtures on the upper floors. In a
one-family dwelling, riser branches will usually proceed from
the main riser to each fixture grouping. In any event the fixture
risers should not depend on the branch risers for support but
should be supported with a pipe bracket. Each fixture is then
connected to the branch riser by a separate line. The last fixture
on a line is usually connected directly to the branch riser.
( See bottom of page for Pex Piping )
Hot Water Heaters - Hot water
heaters are usually powered by electricity, fuel oil, gas, or
in rare cases, coal or wood. They consist of a space for heating
the water and a storage tank for providing hot water over a limited
period of time. All hot water heaters should be fitted with a
temperature-pressure relief valve no matter what fuel is used.
This valve will operate when either the temperature or the pressure
becomes too high due to an interruption of the water supply or
a faulty thermostat.
Pipe Sizes - The size of
basement mains and risers depends on the number of fixtures supplied.
However, a 3/4 inch pipe is usually the minimum size used. This
allows for deposits on the pipe due to hardness in the water
and will usually give satisfactory volume and pressure.
Drainage System
The water supply brought into the house and
used is discharged through the drainage system. This system is
either a sanitary drainage system carrying just interior waste
water or a combined system carrying interior waste and roof runoff.
Sanitary Drainage System -
The proper sizing of the sanitary drain or house drain depends
on the number of fixtures it serves. The usual minimum size is
6 inches in dial diameter. The materials used are usually cast
iron, vitrified clay, plastic, and in rare cases, lead. For proper
flow in the drain the pipe should be sized so that it flows approximately
one-half full. This ensures proper scouring action so that the
solids contained in the waste will not be deposited in the pipe.
Sizing of house drain -
The Uniform Plumbing Code Committee has developed a method
of sizing of house drains in terms of "fixture units." One ''fixture unit" equals
approximately 71 D2 gallons of water per minute. This is the
surge flow-rate of water discharged from a wash basin in 1 minute.
All other fixtures have been related to this unit.
Sanitary Drain Sizes
Grade of house drain - A
house drain or building sewer should be sloped toward the sewer
to ensure scouring of the drain. The usual pitch of a house or
building sewer is 1 D4 inch fall in 1 foot of length.
Fixture and branch drains -
A branch drain is a waste pipe that collects the waste from two
or more fixtures and conveys it to the building or house sewer.
It is sized in the same way as the house sewer, taking into account
that all water closets must have a minimum 3-inch diameter drain,
and only two water closets may connect into one 3-inch drain.
All branch drains must
join the house drain with a "Y" -type fitting. The same is true for fixture drains
joining branch drains. The "Y" fitting is used to eliminate,
as much as possible, the deposit of solids in or near the connection.
A build-up of these solids will cause a blockage in the drain.
Traps - A plumbing trap is
a device used in a waste system to prevent the passage of sewer
gas into the structure and yet not hinder the fixture's discharge
to any great extent. All fixtures connected to a household plumbing
system should have a trap installed in the line.
The effect of sewer gases on the human body
are known; many are extremely harmful. Additionally, certain
sewer gases are explosive. A trap will prevent these gases from
passing into the structure. The depth of the seal in a trap is
usually 2 inches. A deep seal trap has a 4-inch seal.
The purpose of a trap is to seal out sewer
gases from the structure. Since a plumbing system is subject
to wide variations in flow, and this flow originates in many
different sections of the system, there is a wide variation in
pressures in the waste lines. These pressure differences tend
to destroy the water seal in the trap. To counteract this problem
mechanical traps were introduced. It has been found, however,
that the corrosive liquids flowing in the system corrode or jam
these mechanical traps. It is for this reason that most plumbing
codes prohibit mechanical traps.
There are many manufacturers
of traps, and all have varied the design somewhat. The "P" trap
is usually found in lavatories, sinks, urinals, drinking fountains,
showers, and other installations that do not discharge a great
deal of water.
Drum Trap
The drum trap is another
water seal-type trap. They are usually used in the 4x5-inch
or 4x8-inch sizes. These traps have a greater sealing capacity
than the "P" trap and pass
large amounts of water quickly. Drum traps are commonly connected
to bathtubs, foot baths, sitz baths, and modified shower baths.
Objectionable traps
The "S" 1 and the 3h "S" trap should not be
us in plumbing installations. They are almost impossible to ventilate
properly, and the 3h "S" trap forms a perfect siphon.
The bag trap, an extreme
form of "S" trap,
is seldom found.
Any trap that depends
on a moving part for its effectiveness is usually inadequate
and has been prohibited by the local plumbing codes. These
traps work, but their design usually results in their being
higher priced than the "P" or
drum traps. It should be remembered that traps are used only
to prevent the escape of sewer gas into the structure. They do
not compensate for pressure variations. Only proper venting will
eliminate pressure problems.
Ventilation
A plumbing system is ventilated to prevent
trap seal loss, material deterioration. and flow retardation.
Trap seal loss
The seal in a plumbing
trap may be lost due to siphonage (direct and indirect or momentum),
back pressure, evaporation, capillary attraction, or wind effect.
The first two named are probably the most common causes of
loss. If a waste pipe is placed vertically after the fixture
trap, as in an "S" trap,
the waste water continues to flow after the fixture is emptied
and clears the trap. This is caused by the pressure of air on
the fixture water's being greater than the pressure of air in
the waste pipe. The action of the water discharging into the
waste pipe removes the air from that pipe and thereby causes
a negative pressure in the waste line. In the case of indirect
or momentum siphonage, the flow of water past the entrance to
a fixture drain in the waste pipe removes air from the fixture
drain. This reduces the air pressure in the fixture drain, and
the entire assembly acts as an aspirator such as the physician
uses to spray an infected throat.
Back pressure
The flow of water in a soil pipe varies according
to the fixtures being used. A lavatory gives a small flow and
a water closet a large flow. Small flows tend to cling to the
sides of the pipe, but large ones form a slug of waste as they
drop. As this slug of water falls down the pipe the air in front
of it becomes pressurized. As the pressure builds it seeks an
escape point. This point is either a vent or a fixture outlet.
If the vent is plugged or there is no vent, the only escape for
this air is the fixture outlet. The air pressure forces the trap
seal up the pipe into the fixture. If the pressure is great enough
the seal is blown out of the fixture entirely. Figures 6-17 and
6-18 illustrate this type of problem.
Vent sizing
Vent pipe installation is similar to that
of soil and waste pipe. The same fixture unit criteria are used.
Vent pipes of less than 11 D4 inches in diameter should not be
used. Vents smaller than this diameter tend to clog and do not
perform their function.
Individual fixture ventilation -
This type of ventilation is generally used for sinks, lavatories,
drinking fountains, and so forth
Unit venting -
The unit venting system is commonly used in apartment buildings.
This type of system saves a great deal of money and space when
fixtures are placed back to back in separate apartments.
Wet venting - Wet venting
of a plumbing system is common in household bathroom fixture
grouping. It is exactly what the name implies: the vent pipe
is used as a waste line.
Total drainage system
Up to now we have talked about the drain,
soil waste, and vent systems of a plumbing system separately.
For a working system, however, they must all be connected.
Poly-expanded styrene
This is the newest material to come on the
market in response to the problems with Poly. It is expensive
but good. Unlike PVC, it can be used for hot water lines. I see
it in the home improvement places. I have used CPVC frequently
in the past. PEX is especially valued in parts of the country
where water lines frequently freeze for its ability to stretch
without splitting. PEX is increasingly available in the chain
home improvement stores. They may have a few pre-cut pieces and
connectors, but will not have what you need for a plumbing project
on your mobile home. You will need to visit a mobile home supply
store to get the assortment needed for completing a project.