Home Plumbing System: The Basics

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Home Plumbing System: The Basics Your home plumbing system is an important part of your house or your holiday home if you happen to own one. The good news is, if you have a few basic skills such as sweating copper pipes, it can be easy to add to or repair your system. If you know how it works. There are four basic components of a home plumbing system, each one having a specific purpose. Plumbing Fixtures. Are anything connected to the plumbing system. They include kitchen and bathroom sinks, toilets, tubs and showers, hot water tanks, and if you have one the boiler. Anything else that uses water such as dish and clothes washers and garbage disposals would also be plumbing fixtures. So you could say anything that uses or dispenses water would be a fixture. Water Supply System. The water supply system would be the next part of your home plumbing system. This system is made up of the pipes, faucets, fittings, pumps, valves, and tanks that supply and distribute drinkable water. Your home gets its water under pressure from either a municipal water system or sometimes from a well. Your water pressure should be in a range between 30 and 45 psi (pounds per square inch). Any pressure above 45 psi can cause your pipes to hammer or rattle. Above 65psi and it can cause your pipes to burst. You should have some type of pressure regulating valve right after the main water supply valve. If you don't have one, they can easily be purchased and installed. Sometimes when you turn a faucet off quickly, it will cause a shock wave in the pipe and the pipe will rattle or hammer. This can be easily fix by adding an air chamber. An air chamber is a capped extension to the water pipe that is filled with air. It acts like a shock absorber to prevent the pipe from hammering. Drainage System. The drainage system is made up of all the pipes that carry liquid and solid waste out of your house, and into either the sewage system or septic tank. The system works on gravity, and is made up of four components. The waste pipes, soil pipes, soil stack, and traps. Waste pipes carry water from the sinks, tubs, and add ons such as the washing machine and dishwasher. They tie into the soil stack. The soil pipes carry waste to the soil stack primarily from the toilets. Both are pitched downward so they enter the soil stack at a lower level. Soil Stack. The soil stack is a larger 4 inch vertical pipe that the other pipes empty into. This pipe carries the waste to the main drain which then empties into the sewer line or septic tank. Traps are installed under all the fixtures. They are usually look like a S laying on its side. They hold water in the lower elbow which acts a seal, prevent sewer gases from entering the home. Toilets have built in traps.


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