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Charles Spitzer
 
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Default Joining Sewer Vents


"Lance Uppercut" wrote in message
...
Thanks for all of the replies.

The fine gentlemen that lived in the house before me was a plumber, just

not
a very good one. I assume that he added the vent that terminates in the
attic for one reason or another when he remodeled the bathroom. I had a
pumber out months ago for another reason and showed him the pipe. He had

me
flush the toilet and turn on the sinks in the bathroom directly below

where
the pipe enters the floor of the attic while he listened at the open end

of
the pipe. We determined that it is a vent for that bathroom. Am I wrong

in
labeling this a sewer vent? The pipe that terminates is 2 inches thick
while the main stack is 4 inches. They are around 6 feet apart and I

could
angle the connection upward. Do they make connections for 2 inches going
into 4 inches? I guess I'll have to go wander around Home Depot for an

hour
or two : )

I also have another vent that I found for a bathroom in the basement. It
terminates right below the ceiling in the laundry room in my basement.
Again, there are no bad odors present. This one has a filter on the top

of
it. I showed it to the same plumber that was in my attic and he told me
that the filter just stopped air from going back into the vent. He also
told me that he did not think that this was a problem. I disagreed. Why
would anyone want to vent inside their house? Granted I am no plumber,

but
this just seemed stupid. Since most of the people that applied to my
original thread are plumbers, I would appreciate you comments on this
situation as well.

Thanks,

Scott


sewer or septic system? if sewer and there was a backup into your house,
think that pipe opening in your attic would hold much 'stuff', and where
would it go when it got to the top of the pipe?


wrote in message
...
On 16 Dec 2003 10:12:03 -0800, (Lance
Uppercut) wrote:

Hi all.

In the attic of my new house I have two PVC sewer vent pipes that come
up from the floorboards. One of them is run completely through the
roof. The other terminates about two feet up from the floor into the
attic. Would it be feasible for me to put an elbow onto this pipe,
extend it over and join it with the pipe that goes through the roof.
I would like to avoid putting another hole in my roof for obvious
reasons. I'm not sure about the codes in my area, but I imagine that
this would not be a problem. I would appreciate opinions.

Thanks,

Scott



I'm a retired plumber. The answer is YES. Be sure that is a vent
though. I'd assume it would stink in your attic. But it could be an
air vent from a fan or dryer vent, or ?????

Be sure it is a sewer vent. If it is, use the SAME size pipe, and use
a slight upward pitch to the other stack. You dont need much pitch,
but you dont want it going downward.