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HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Traps, Vents & Drains - Short #177

HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Bryan Orr

Training, Careers, Airconditioning, Self-improvement, Hvac, Business, Education, Refrigeration, Heating, Ac, Apprenticeship

4.8985 Ratings

🗓️ 17 October 2023

⏱️ 9 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this short episode, Bryan covers traps, vents, and drains. He explains some common misconceptions and best practices for fabricating drains, especially in residential and light commercial structures in Florida.

Cleanouts and vents are commonly confused with each other, and people often cap vents and leave cleanouts open. However, cleanouts (which must be capped) will always be before the trap, and vents come after the trap. When you have an indoor air handler, furnace, or fan coil, vents must be higher than the drain pan to allow the float switch to trip when the drain backs up. (Rooftop units have shorter vents.) Vents should stay open. We use static pressure to determine the trap depth, and the trap outlet must be shorter than the inlet.

The best practice for drain pitch is to have 1/4" of fall for every foot of horizontal run, and we must avoid making double traps where air can get trapped between them. Vents prevent air bubbles from forming in drains with multiple traps. Double traps often form when drains are not supported properly and sag over time; using proper support in your installations is the best way to prevent that from happening.

In Florida, we often use only one trap and still get drainage. A typical installation has a cleanout, a trap, and a vent higher than the drain pan, all on a downward pitch. However, we also get severe condensation on our drains, and we must insulate the horizontal PVC runs to prevent sweating. In multi-family applications with common drains, each individual needs a trap and then a vent before the main drain.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Well, lookie there, here you are again listening to my podcast. Isn't that nice of you?

0:09.0

Mighty nice of you indeed. This is the HVAC school podcast. I'm Brian. This is the

0:13.4

podcast. Or I talk about HVACR stuff and hopefully it helps you. That's the goal

0:18.4

at least. And today we're going to be talking about traps and vents.

0:21.8

All this stuff people are like, you've talked about this before. I mean I mentioned Today we're going to be talking about traps and vents.

0:22.6

All this stuff, people are like,

0:23.6

you've talked about this before.

0:24.4

I mean, I'm mentioning this a lot in the shorts,

0:25.8

but in the shorts, it's just a good reminder.

0:28.0

And maybe there's something you will pick up

0:29.6

that you did not know before. And that's the the point but before we do that let's thank our great

0:36.0

sponsors powered by Copeland discover the White Rogers HSI module universal universal, efficient, and easy to program with the W.R. White

0:47.4

Rogers mobile app.

0:49.9

Find out more at HVECR School.com slash HSI module.

0:56.7

Carrier at carrier.com.

0:59.8

Refrigeration Technologies and specifically Viper Wipes, the all-purpose wipe that is really

1:06.9

amazing what it can cut through.

1:09.4

Everything from Mastick to oil-grease-tar, grime, and it's nice on the hands.

1:14.0

Make some nice and soft when you're done,

1:16.0

so that way you can go home and head out a dansin

1:20.0

when you get back to the house.

1:23.0

Find out more at Refrigetech.com slash viper-wipes.

...

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