Plumbing Vent Question

eng1886trk

Member

Equipment
2016 B2650, 60" bucket, QH15, RB1572, LR1572, BB1260, 42" forks
Mar 9, 2016
76
0
6
Lancaster, PA
This is a question for the plumbers in the group. I am looking to add a basement bathroom with a sump pit. With how close the fixtures are to the pit and the fact that the pit is vented, do I need to vent near the lav? If so would an air admittance valve work under the sink to accomplish this?

Picture is a rough sketch of what I am thinking of doing. 4” for roughly 3 feet to pick up the toilet and washer drain and then an additional 7 feet of 2” to the lav.

Pit will be vented to the exterior.

Please let me know your thoughts so I do this correctly.






Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

Cglaza

Member

Equipment
L2500DT, BX2380, G6200H
Aug 30, 2015
170
2
18
Freeland, mi
This is a question for the plumbers in the group. I am looking to add a basement bathroom with a sump pit. With how close the fixtures are to the pit and the fact that the pit is vented, do I need to vent near the lav? If so would an air admittance valve work under the sink to accomplish this?

Picture is a rough sketch of what I am thinking of doing. 4” for roughly 3 feet to pick up the toilet and washer drain and then an additional 7 feet of 2” to the lav.

Pit will be vented to the exterior.

Please let me know your thoughts so I do this correctly.






Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
With the proximately of the pit to the toilet, when your pump cycles, you will likely experience cavitation in the toilet due to the violent nature of the pump action. Make sure that your vent out of your sump is as big as possible and as short as possible with as little turns as possible. No other vents will be necessary. Good luck with your project. I did the same thing and enjoyed the outcome very much.

Sent from my XT1710-02 using Tapatalk
 

North Idaho Wolfman

Moderator
Staff member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
L3450DT-GST, Woods FEL, B7100 HSD, FEL, 60" SB, 743 Bobcat with V2203, and more
Jun 9, 2013
30,188
6,356
113
Sandpoint, ID
I don't fully agree with Cglaza,
I think you need vents on the lav and on the toilet, new codes ever require a vent on the washing machine line.

I have just plumbed my house and have vents off of all three fixtures.

How hard would it be to incorporate a 1 1/2 (lav and washer) and 2" (toilet) vent line off of those drain lines vented back to the sump vent?
That would guarantee to air intrusion or dry trap issues.
 

sagor

Active member

Equipment
BX25, BX2750D, BX2760A, 5' back blade
Jan 9, 2017
285
58
28
Sudbury, ON, Canada
I don't fully agree with Cglaza,
I think you need vents on the lav and on the toilet, new codes ever require a vent on the washing machine line.

I have just plumbed my house and have vents off of all three fixtures.

How hard would it be to incorporate a 1 1/2 (lav and washer) and 2" (toilet) vent line off of those drain lines vented back to the sump vent?
That would guarantee to air intrusion or dry trap issues.
I agree somewhat with Wolfman. However, if you vent the LAV, it "could" be considered a "wet vent" for the toilet, meaning that the LAV vent is used for the toilet since it is often not possible to use both at the same time. This LAV vent would also provide the pressure relief when the pump runs, to prevent cavitation as one described (suction/vacuum).
Safest is to vent all 3, and could probably be the same 2" vent pipe from the sump vent.
I'm not a plumber, but have gone through a couple "inspections" by those anal building inspectors. They always find something wrong at the end of the inspection, right after they ask "who did your plumbing". Nothing wrong before that question...
 

Bulldog777

New member

Equipment
L3200, RTA1266, Modern 5' BB, Mustang 60 FM
Jan 25, 2017
215
0
0
Texas
You could plumb the tee's in for the vents, and if you need them... add them later.

Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk
 

Redlands

New member
Sep 16, 2016
391
2
0
North Central Oklahoma
I really think you need a vent on the lavatory. It’s at the end of the line and so will help all of the issues. Since the line is fairly short it maybe all you need. It can vent out or I believe it can circle back high up into into your exiting vent so as to prevent another roof penetration. They also make vents you can install under the lavatory sink that has a flapper valve in them. Not a huge fan but their real common. A vent for the commode is always a good idea and could be in that same vent loop if needed. No idea on the code for your area but its way better to have more vent than needed.
 
Last edited:

johnjk

Well-known member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
B3200 w/loader, Woods RC5 brush hog, 4' box blade, tooth bar, B1700 MMM,
Apr 13, 2017
1,458
1,263
113
West Mansfield, OH
When we build last year, I had them rough in for a basement bathroom so the pit is there along with the piping for toilet, shower and sink. There is a vent stack that runs up and out separate from the piping for the pit. This will be connected to the pit and the sink being the last in the line. Toilet and shower will be vented by the sump.

Looking at the attached image, the red horizontal line is the waste line to the septic. This will go down to the pit circled in green. The blue circle is the shower, the yellow is toilet and pink is for the lav. The purple arrow is the vent rough in for the basement bath and that will be run down to the pit and over to the lav.

In your case, connect your washer and lav in to the vent as well. Look online and google basement plumbing venting with sump pit.

Key is you do not want air trying to equalize coming back up the drain pipe. That will give you slow and noisy drains or worse case water on the floor.
 

Attachments