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#1
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![]() Hello - I bought an older house and I am renovating and making my half bath a full bath. I wanted to install an exhaust fan in the bathroom, but it is not very convienent to send it to the side of the house and I don't won't to bother cutting a hole in the roof. So, I was wondering, since the main air vent to both bathrooms is directly above my new bathroom, can I have piece of PVC installed so that my exhaust vent blows into the air vent? Is this code worthy? Thanks for the suggestions... John |
#2
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![]() johnnymo wrote: Hello - I bought an older house and I am renovating and making my half bath a full bath. I wanted to install an exhaust fan in the bathroom, but it is not very convienent to send it to the side of the house and I don't won't to bother cutting a hole in the roof. So, I was wondering, since the main air vent to both bathrooms is directly above my new bathroom, can I have piece of PVC installed so that my exhaust vent blows into the air vent? Is this code worthy? Thanks for the suggestions... John No. It won't pass code and for good reason. Do you want sewer gas coming into your bathroom? |
#3
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![]() johnnymo wrote: Hello - I bought an older house and I am renovating and making my half bath a full bath. I wanted to install an exhaust fan in the bathroom, but it is not very convienent to send it to the side of the house and I don't won't to bother cutting a hole in the roof. So, I was wondering, since the main air vent to both bathrooms is directly above my new bathroom, can I have piece of PVC installed so that my exhaust vent blows into the air vent? Is this code worthy? Thanks for the suggestions... John No. Except there's a water-trap, you can only connect draing piping to the outside, via drain line or vent. Sewer gas can be explosive, and it's happened that contractor cracks a gas main near a sewer line, with natural gas getting into house with dry trap. With house coming apart in a fireball. This was a block away. So you see why sewer venting is not a "convenience" thing. J |
#4
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![]() Ok...I am no plumber and makes good sense, but is there enough pressure in the air vent to push the "sewer gases" sideways and down to my exhaust fan. I was thinking as long as I don't create a direct route I would be ok. I just wanted to tie on to the side, kind of like my sink is right now. Thanks for the suggestions. I guess I will do a little more research. |
#5
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"johnnymo" wrote in message
ups.com... Ok...I am no plumber and makes good sense, but is there enough pressure in the air vent to push the "sewer gases" sideways and down to my exhaust fan. I was thinking as long as I don't create a direct route I would be ok. I just wanted to tie on to the side, kind of like my sink is right now. Thanks for the suggestions. I guess I will do a little more research. The flex hose from mine is wired to the inside of one of the existing roof vents. It works fine. When I re-roof soon, I'm having it routed to its own vent, but you could get away with jury-rigging it, if necessary. |
#6
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![]() Cool...I am fixing this house to live in, but not very long (~5 years), so I wanna stay close to code so that people won't make me fix it when I go to sell the house. |
#7
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"johnnymo" wrote in message
ups.com... Cool...I am fixing this house to live in, but not very long (~5 years), so I wanna stay close to code so that people won't make me fix it when I go to sell the house. Be sure to wire the pipe as far up in the vent as possible, so moisture is blown all the way out. Otherwise, it's possible to have condensation on the inside of the metal vent, which may drip back down again. I wondered about this with mine, so I've observed while the shower as on full blast. You should do the same when you're done. |
#8
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![]() Yea, that is why I thought the idea was a good one, b/c it is a very short distance, just up 1' and over 1' ft, but the air vent still has a way to go, so I thought if there was condensation, it is going to drain down the air stack and into the sewer. I just want to make sure you guys don't think the sewer gas is going to make its way past my exhaust fan? Thanks |
#9
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JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
"johnnymo" wrote in message ups.com... Cool...I am fixing this house to live in, but not very long (~5 years), so I wanna stay close to code so that people won't make me fix it when I go to sell the house. Be sure to wire the pipe as far up in the vent as possible, so moisture is blown all the way out. Otherwise, it's possible to have condensation on the inside of the metal vent, which may drip back down again. I wondered about this with mine, so I've observed while the shower as on full blast. You should do the same when you're done. I sure hope you are talking about one of the attic vents and not the sewer vent, Joe. Sounds like Johnny wants to hook into the sewer vent pipe stack which will cause all sorts of trouble when he wants to sell the house. Not to mention that "wonderful" odor he'll be trying to track down in his bathroom on those occasional days. My advice Johnny, is don't tap into the sewer vent stack unless you intend to use it to dump sewage into. -- Grandpa |
#10
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According to johnnymo :
Yea, that is why I thought the idea was a good one, b/c it is a very short distance, just up 1' and over 1' ft, but the air vent still has a way to go, so I thought if there was condensation, it is going to drain down the air stack and into the sewer. I just want to make sure you guys don't think the sewer gas is going to make its way past my exhaust fan? If you interconnected the bathroom vent to the DWV vent, and if the exhaust fan isn't running, why wouldn't it get past? It's a _gas_, remember? Would just need a minor vacuum in the house (eg: woodstove or stove vent) to make it a high volume blast of stink. -- Chris Lewis, Una confibula non set est It's not just anyone who gets a Starship Cruiser class named after them. |
#11
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"johnnymo" wrote in message
ps.com... Yea, that is why I thought the idea was a good one, b/c it is a very short distance, just up 1' and over 1' ft, but the air vent still has a way to go, so I thought if there was condensation, it is going to drain down the air stack and into the sewer. I just want to make sure you guys don't think the sewer gas is going to make its way past my exhaust fan? Thanks You're not going to attach it to the sewer pipe or vent. I'm talking about the attic vents. If you don't have one nearby, it would really be worth your money to install a vent specifically made for the fan, or have a roofer do it. Repeat: You are not going anywhere near the sewer pipe. Crush the idea. |
#12
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johnnymo wrote:
Yea, that is why I thought the idea was a good one, b/c it is a very short distance, just up 1' and over 1' ft, but the air vent still has a way to go, so I thought if there was condensation, it is going to drain down the air stack and into the sewer. I just want to make sure you guys don't think the sewer gas is going to make its way past my exhaust fan? Thanks It will, you won't like it. Don't do it. -- Grandpa |
#13
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According to Grandpa :
I sure hope you are talking about one of the attic vents and not the sewer vent, Joe. Sounds like Johnny wants to hook into the sewer vent pipe stack which will cause all sorts of trouble when he wants to sell the house. Not to mention that "wonderful" odor he'll be trying to track down in his bathroom on those occasional days. Whaddya mean "occasional"? I suspect it'd be pretty much all stench, all the time ;-) -- Chris Lewis, Una confibula non set est It's not just anyone who gets a Starship Cruiser class named after them. |
#14
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![]() Thanks Grandpa. So, what is the difference in hooking up a sink to the side of the sewer vent than hooking up a piece of flex hosing that goes down. Maybe the trap? Is it b/c there is always water/gunk in the trap not allowing the gases to go up through the sink? My exhaust fan hose is always going to be dry so that would be a problem. Hmm....maybe not such a good idea? |
#15
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"johnnymo" wrote in message
oups.com... Thanks Grandpa. So, what is the difference in hooking up a sink to the side of the sewer vent than hooking up a piece of flex hosing that goes down. Maybe the trap? Is it b/c there is always water/gunk in the trap not allowing the gases to go up through the sink? My exhaust fan hose is always going to be dry so that would be a problem. Hmm....maybe not such a good idea? Give some thought to the fact that nobody does this. Not ever. There is a reason. |
#16
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![]() Awesome...good ideas. Idea is dead. Makes sense. I thought I was onto to something, but as usual, there is a reason why it is not done this way. I was just testing you guys....jk. have a whole house fan, and the minute I turn that sucker on, I can see it sucking the air from my bathroom including the air in my exchaut fan vent when the fan is not running. Back to the drawing board. I appreciated every ones ideas and suggestions. Seems like a really dumb idea now that I look back. Peace. |
#17
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"johnnymo" wrote in message
ps.com... Awesome...good ideas. Idea is dead. Makes sense. I thought I was onto to something, but as usual, there is a reason why it is not done this way. I was just testing you guys....jk. have a whole house fan, and the minute I turn that sucker on, I can see it sucking the air from my bathroom including the air in my exchaut fan vent when the fan is not running. Back to the drawing board. I appreciated every ones ideas and suggestions. Seems like a really dumb idea now that I look back. Peace. Call a roofer or two or three and find out what it could cost to have a proper vent installed. It might be cheaper than you think. |
#18
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According to JoeSpareBedroom :
Call a roofer or two or three and find out what it could cost to have a proper vent installed. It might be cheaper than you think. Another approach is to run tubing/hose from the bathroom vent to the eaves, and face the outlet _down_ thru the soffit. Prevents warm air siphoning, no wall rework required. -- Chris Lewis, Una confibula non set est It's not just anyone who gets a Starship Cruiser class named after them. |
#19
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![]() johnnymo wrote: Thanks Grandpa. So, what is the difference in hooking up a sink to the side of the sewer vent than hooking up a piece of flex hosing that goes down. Maybe the trap? Is it b/c there is always water/gunk in the trap not allowing the gases to go up through the sink? My exhaust fan hose is always going to be dry so that would be a problem. Hmm....maybe not such a good idea? That would be the exact reason, sink drains have traps to prevent sewer gas from entering the room. The fan connection to the DWV vent pipe not only violates code(s), its a plain Bad Idea as stated by others. Aside from a low pressure conditon in the building (think kitchen exahust fan, opening a well sealed outside door with all the windows closed, the aforementioned fireplace or wood stove) causing sewer gas to be drawn in when the fan is not operating, it is possible (though less likely,) that with the bathroom fan operating, it is conceivable that the positive pressure introduced by the fan could have an adverse affect on one of the drain trap's contents, should the vent outlet become (partially or fully) obstructed, say be snow. I admit, this is a long shot, but you are looking for reasons why this is a Bad Idea, that's another. I'll echo what a previous poster said - make sure the fan exhaust makes it outside. Don't let it loose inside the attic. You'll be asking for moisture trouble. |
#20
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![]() johnnymo wrote: Thanks Grandpa. So, what is the difference in hooking up a sink to the side of the sewer vent than hooking up a piece of flex hosing that goes down. Maybe the trap? Is it b/c there is always water/gunk in the trap not allowing the gases to go up through the sink? My exhaust fan hose is always going to be dry so that would be a problem. Hmm....maybe not such a good idea? Here's something to think about. Know why managers of large commercial buildings have ALL the floors mopped routinely -- even in areas that are never used? It's to keep the floor drains wet so they don't stink (seriously). They also make floor drains with "drippers" built in that connect to a water line. They drip to keep the trap wet. I guess all I can add to this is to cut the pipe open, take a good whiff, and see what you think. BTW, what you are proposing is known to happen in larger applications, but they use a mechanically ventilated pipe so there's no back draft. |
#21
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In article .com, "johnnymo" wrote:
Thanks Grandpa. So, what is the difference in hooking up a sink to the side of the sewer vent than hooking up a piece of flex hosing that goes down. Maybe the trap? Is it b/c there is always water/gunk in the trap not allowing the gases to go up through the sink? Precisely. That's *exactly* what the trap is for. Many people believe, mistakenly, that the trap is there to catch objects and stop them from going down the drain. Nope. It's there for one reason: to keep sewer gas from coming *up*. And that's why it's important for there to be water in the trap all the time. My exhaust fan hose is always going to be dry so that would be a problem. Hmm....maybe not such a good idea? How many times do you need to be told it's not a good idea, before that finally sinks in? -- Regards, Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com) It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again. |
#22
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"Doug Miller" wrote in message
et... In article .com, "johnnymo" wrote: Thanks Grandpa. So, what is the difference in hooking up a sink to the side of the sewer vent than hooking up a piece of flex hosing that goes down. Maybe the trap? Is it b/c there is always water/gunk in the trap not allowing the gases to go up through the sink? Precisely. That's *exactly* what the trap is for. Many people believe, mistakenly, that the trap is there to catch objects and stop them from going down the drain. Nope. It's there for one reason: to keep sewer gas from coming *up*. And that's why it's important for there to be water in the trap all the time. My exhaust fan hose is always going to be dry so that would be a problem. Hmm....maybe not such a good idea? How many times do you need to be told it's not a good idea, before that finally sinks in? -- Regards, Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com) He was waiting for YOU to stop by and tell him. He didn't believe anyone else. |
#23
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In article , "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
"Doug Miller" wrote in message . net... In article .com, "johnnymo" wrote: Thanks Grandpa. So, what is the difference in hooking up a sink to the side of the sewer vent than hooking up a piece of flex hosing that goes down. Maybe the trap? Is it b/c there is always water/gunk in the trap not allowing the gases to go up through the sink? Precisely. That's *exactly* what the trap is for. Many people believe, mistakenly, that the trap is there to catch objects and stop them from going down the drain. Nope. It's there for one reason: to keep sewer gas from coming *up*. And that's why it's important for there to be water in the trap all the time. My exhaust fan hose is always going to be dry so that would be a problem. Hmm....maybe not such a good idea? How many times do you need to be told it's not a good idea, before that finally sinks in? -- Regards, Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com) He was waiting for YOU to stop by and tell him. He didn't believe anyone else. You really should see a therapist, Joe. This fixation you have on me isn't healthy. -- Regards, Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com) It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again. |
#24
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"Doug Miller" wrote in message
et... In article , "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: "Doug Miller" wrote in message .net... In article .com, "johnnymo" wrote: Thanks Grandpa. So, what is the difference in hooking up a sink to the side of the sewer vent than hooking up a piece of flex hosing that goes down. Maybe the trap? Is it b/c there is always water/gunk in the trap not allowing the gases to go up through the sink? Precisely. That's *exactly* what the trap is for. Many people believe, mistakenly, that the trap is there to catch objects and stop them from going down the drain. Nope. It's there for one reason: to keep sewer gas from coming *up*. And that's why it's important for there to be water in the trap all the time. My exhaust fan hose is always going to be dry so that would be a problem. Hmm....maybe not such a good idea? How many times do you need to be told it's not a good idea, before that finally sinks in? -- Regards, Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com) He was waiting for YOU to stop by and tell him. He didn't believe anyone else. You really should see a therapist, Joe. This fixation you have on me isn't healthy. My fixation? 4-5 hours ago, half a dozen people told him his idea was lame. You needed to chime in and say the exact same thing? |
#25
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In article , "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
"Doug Miller" wrote in message . net... In article , "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: "Doug Miller" wrote in message y.net... In article .com, "johnnymo" wrote: Thanks Grandpa. So, what is the difference in hooking up a sink to the side of the sewer vent than hooking up a piece of flex hosing that goes down. Maybe the trap? Is it b/c there is always water/gunk in the trap not allowing the gases to go up through the sink? Precisely. That's *exactly* what the trap is for. Many people believe, mistakenly, that the trap is there to catch objects and stop them from going down the drain. Nope. It's there for one reason: to keep sewer gas from coming *up*. And that's why it's important for there to be water in the trap all the time. My exhaust fan hose is always going to be dry so that would be a problem. Hmm....maybe not such a good idea? How many times do you need to be told it's not a good idea, before that finally sinks in? -- Regards, Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com) He was waiting for YOU to stop by and tell him. He didn't believe anyone else. You really should see a therapist, Joe. This fixation you have on me isn't healthy. My fixation? 4-5 hours ago, half a dozen people told him his idea was lame. You needed to chime in and say the exact same thing? I see you're still having trouble with reading comprehension -- I responded to his question about the trap. -- Regards, Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com) It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again. |
#26
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johnnymo wrote:
Hello - I bought an older house and I am renovating and making my half bath a full bath. I wanted to install an exhaust fan in the bathroom, but it is not very convienent to send it to the side of the house and I don't won't to bother cutting a hole in the roof. So, I was wondering, since the main air vent to both bathrooms is directly above my new bathroom, can I have piece of PVC installed so that my exhaust vent blows into the air vent? Is this code worthy? Thanks for the suggestions... John I see you have a long thread about this, but I didn't see one of the simplest answers. The sewer stack isn't big enough. The vent fan needs a 4 inch line. For a sewer vent plus a fan vent you need a 6 to 8 inch line. I doubt if you have a sewer stack that large. The proper way is to run the vent fan in a 4 inch metal vent pipe to its own outside vent. Bill Gill |
#27
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SEWER ODORS are a problem. SWEETFILTER is the solution.
Start making money today at www.Sweetfilter.cn Simply join our affiliate program there at CCNOW for Sweetfilters. Every city, town, etc. has obnoxious odor regulations. Just tell your neighbors, friends, public officials, etc. that their rooftop vent pipes and street manholes STINK and you have a solution at www.Sweetfilter.com You can makes hundreds of dollars each day selling and installing Sweetfilters!!! Grandpa wrote: JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "johnnymo" wrote in message ups.com... Cool...I am fixing this house to live in, but not very long (~5 years), so I wanna stay close to code so that people won't make me fix it when I go to sell the house. Be sure to wire the pipe as far up in the vent as possible, so moisture is blown all the way out. Otherwise, it's possible to have condensation on the inside of the metal vent, which may drip back down again. I wondered about this with mine, so I've observed while the shower as on full blast. You should do the same when you're done. I sure hope you are talking about one of the attic vents and not the sewer vent, Joe. Sounds like Johnny wants to hook into the sewer vent pipe stack which will cause all sorts of trouble when he wants to sell the house. Not to mention that "wonderful" odor he'll be trying to track down in his bathroom on those occasional days. My advice Johnny, is don't tap into the sewer vent stack unless you intend to use it to dump sewage into. -- Grandpa |
#28
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Yet another useless response from the succo company that adds nothing to
the answer provided by trader (an probably numerous other people) in a 3 year old thread with the OP long gone. The succo company response is spam from a plumber. With a response this stupid it is a company for anyone in Louisiana to avoid. -- bud-- |
#29
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replying to johnnymo, Attila wrote:
Exhaust fans have a flap door, so air can move only one direction. Also keeps bugs out! So I don't understand how sewer gas can go down into the exhaust fan. It can open the door against the reversed airflow? If the air duct from the exhaust fan connected into the vertical main sewer vent which is 3 or 4 inch pipe with a T fitting, then any condensation from the moist air forced out by the fan is just dripping down into the sewer! When your fan is working, it creates positive pressure in the vent system which is even help the water flow down if somebody flash the toilet or drain the bat tub. It would act like the turbo charger on vehicles! If the fan do not work at the time, when water is draining, the draining water creates negative pressure in the vent so it sucks air from outside as usual and may some air from your bathroom too, through the exhaust fan. I can't think of a scenario, when a sewer gas rising up inside the main vent would make a major U turn down towards the exhaust fan, open the flap door, and sneak into your bathroom! In a windy day you can see the water in your toilet moving up and down, cause the pressure change in the vent pipe moving the trap water in the P-trap. Because the exhaust fan have a flap door allowing air flow only one direction, the sewer gas can't flow back downwards, passing the one way door! Its act like the air admittance valves! -- for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...ma-161591-.htm |
#30
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On Saturday, December 8, 2018 at 7:14:06 PM UTC-5, Attila wrote:
replying to johnnymo, Attila wrote: Exhaust fans have a flap door, so air can move only one direction. Also keeps bugs out! So I don't understand how sewer gas can go down into the exhaust fan. It can open the door against the reversed airflow? If the air duct from the exhaust fan connected into the vertical main sewer vent which is 3 or 4 inch pipe with a T fitting, then any condensation from the moist air forced out by the fan is just dripping down into the sewer! When your fan is working, it creates positive pressure in the vent system which is even help the water flow down if somebody flash the toilet or drain the bat tub. It would act like the turbo charger on vehicles! If the fan do not work at the time, when water is draining, the draining water creates negative pressure in the vent so it sucks air from outside as usual and may some air from your bathroom too, through the exhaust fan. I can't think of a scenario, when a sewer gas rising up inside the main vent would make a major U turn down towards the exhaust fan, open the flap door, and sneak into your bathroom! The flap is far from a perfect seal, even if new and functioning properly. I've heard them bounce around on a windy day. Sewer gas is stinky. Do you want sewer stink leaking into your bathroom? Aside from that, it's a code violation and it should not be hard to properly vent a bathroom fan to the outside. In a windy day you can see the water in your toilet moving up and down, cause the pressure change in the vent pipe moving the trap water in the P-trap. Because the exhaust fan have a flap door allowing air flow only one direction, the sewer gas can't flow back downwards, passing the one way door! Its act like the air admittance valves! I would expect that an air admittance valve is designed and tested to an actual plumbing standard and would be a better seal and reliable compared to a flimsy piece of metal acting like a damper in a cheap bathroom fan. |
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