Plumbing - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 35
About This Presentation
Title:

Plumbing

Description:

Plumbing – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:265
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 36
Provided by: derekh6
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Plumbing


1
Plumbing
  • Town of Markham
  • Derek Hanlon

2
Why Plumbing?
  • History of Plumbing
  • The term plumber, originates from the Latin term
    plumbus (worker of lead)
  • First signs of plumbing date back to 250 BC
  • Water was delivered from the mountains via
    aqueducts
  • Toilets were usually holes in the floor, (privy)
    flowing water took waste away
  • Ancient baths were considered healing pools (a
    place to cleanse your body of grime and bacteria)

3
The Fall of Ancient Rome
  • 450 AD seen fall of Roman Empire
  • The dark ages came, the world went into a
    regressed time
  • No government
  • No science
  • No art
  • Worst of all no plumbing!

4
The Need for Change
  • Throughout the Middle Ages, as many people were
    struck down by typhoid, dysentery and cholera
    than were killed in all wars up to that time
  • 1348, Black Plague entered England, wiped out
    one-third of the population
  • Major rivers became open sewers
  • People used chamber pots, when full, dumped the
    sewage out the window
  • Sewage stench, waste and effluent flowing in open
    ditches on the streets
  • Realizing that human waste was a major
    contributor to deadly diseases, some changes came
    to be
  • Not till 1848, England passed the National
    Plumbing Health Age, mandating that every home
    have a flushing toilet or an ash pit in every
    home.

5
Evolution of Plumbing
  • ash privey

For the Working Man and Woman, finally a bit of
privacy.
6
Antique Toilet Water supply and lead trap
7
Old SayingPlumbers protect the Health of the
Nation
  • Actually, inspectors of plumbing protect the
    health of the nation

8
End of Part One
  • Another old saying
  • Its all downhill from here on

9
Safe, Operating, Plumbing Systems
  • design
  • materials
  • installation

10
Complete System
  • Sewer and drains
  • Water service
  • Distribution piping
  • Waste and vent
  • Installation of fixtures
  • Inspection and testing

11
Waste Vents
  • The waste pipe carries the waste to the building
    drain.
  • For waste to flow, venting is introduced into the
    plumbing system so that the waste is not
    subjected to any air resistance, positive or
    negative pressure.
  • Due to the cohesive qualities of water, air is
    introduced to the pipe in order to break the flow
    of fluid and siphoning the trap.

12
Waste and Vents
  • Ontario Building Code Part 7
  • 7.4. Drainage Systems
  • connections to sanitary systems
  • location of fixtures
  • traps, cleanouts
  • sizing of drainage piping
  • minimum slope on drainage pipe and fixture drains
    ( 7.4.8.1.)

13
Waste and Vents
  • 7.5. Venting Systems
  • venting for traps
  • all traps require a vent, except as stated in
    7.5.1.1. (2) (3)

14
Vent Locations
  • location of vent pipes
  • minimum and maximum distance of vent pipe from
    trap weir
  • total allowable fall from p-trap to vent
    connection
  • cumulative change of direction restrictions
  • no waste pipe is connected to the fixture drain
    between the trap and its protecting vent (except
    for wet vented applications7.5.7.1.)

15
Branch Venting
Vent stack
Double TY
Wet vent
Stack vent
Branch vents
16
Venting
Branch Vent Sizing
17
Minimum Size of Vent Pipes
As an inspector, what do you think happened here?
18
Wet Venting
  • What is Wet Venting ?
  • Wet venting is a form of group venting in which
    part of a fixtures vent pipe receives the waste
    from another fixture. A wet vent pipe therefore
    performs a dual role, serving both as a waste
    pipe and a vent pipe.
  • all fixtures are on the same level
  • maximum number of fixtures in the wet vented
    group is three
  • at least one of the wet venting fixtures is
    drained through a vertical continuous waste and
    vent and
  • wet vent is connected to the horizontal waste
    pipe downstream from the weir of the P-trap at
    least 450mm and not more than 1500mm, except when
    the wet vented fixture is a water closet or other
    fixture with a siphonic trap

19
Wet Venting 7.5.7.1.(1)
20
Wet Venting7.5.7.1. (1)
21
Examples of Wet Venting
  • Bathtub wet vented through basin

Vent located a minimum of 450 mm and maximum 1500
mm from the bottom of the fixture outlet pipe
22
Sizing of Vent Pipesand Wet Vents
7.5.7.1.(1)
23
Water closet, wet vented through a bathtub Slide
1
3x2 Y
2 wet vent
Water closet
24
Water closet wet vented by bathtub Slide 2
2 x 1 ½ x 1 ½ TY Continuous waste and vent
2 wet vent
25
Sizing of Vent Pipesand Wet Vents
7.5.7.1.(1)
26
Stack Venting andModified Stack Venting
  • It is common to find installed in plumbing
    systems stack venting and modified stack venting
    ( 7.5.2.1.)
  • Why?
  • uses the stack for waste discharge and venting
  • saves labour and material

27
Stack Venting 7.5.2.1.
  • Maximum number of fixtures allowed above
    (upstream) water closet is 4 (7.5.2.1. (1) (a)
  • Maximum number of fixture units above water
    closet is 8
  • Not greater than two stack vented water closets
  • (must be connected at the same level)
  • Uppermost fixture must discharge to the vertical
    portion of the stack 7.5.2.1. (1) (e) and (f)

28
Stack Venting 7.5.2.1.
  • Maximum of 4 fixtures

    discharging above water closet
  • Water closet discharges last
  • All fixtures must be within 1500 mm from soil
    stack

29
Stack Vented Group
Water closet discharging last
Stack vent
Stack vented bathtub
30
Double TY
Is this permitted ?
Answer Refer to table 7.2.4.5.
31
Stack Venting
Discharge to vertical portion of stack
Water closet discharges last
32
Modified Stack Venting 7.5.2.1.
Same rules apply as in stack venting, except that
the vent is sized by total fixture load and
is not required to be the size of the soil stack.
Soil stack
33
Modified Stack Venting
1 ½ inch
3 inch
Modified stack vent
34
Thanks For Attending
  • May you be flushed with success.

35
Credits
  • Photography Derek Hanlon
  • Editing Tony Boyko
  • Technical Support Piero Cannistra
  • Sound Bojangles Sound Studios, Keswick
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com