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N8N N8N is offline
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Default Routing T&P relief valve pipe of water heater into sump pit

On Mar 7, 11:43*pm, Harry K wrote:
On Mar 7, 11:02*am, N8N wrote:





On Mar 7, 8:09*am, jamesgangnc wrote:


On Mar 7, 6:37*am, Mikepier wrote:


My water heater has a 3/4" copper pipe from the T&P valve extending
down about 8" from the floor. I have a sump pit about 5 feet to the
left. I wanted to somehow route this discharge pipe into the pit in
case somethig happens.
Obviously it would be easy if I used some kind of flexible hose rated
for high temps. Is there anything wrong in doing it this way? How is
it usally done?


What kind of floor do you have? *If it's concrete I'd probably just
leave it alone. *I've never seen one of those valves blow myself. *I
have seen them develop leaks that you will not notice if you route it
into your sump pit. *I have seen slow leak failures of hw tanks as
well as catastrophic failures. *All were the tank leaking, not the
safety valve. *If you want to do something to protect the floor area
of your basement I'd suggest a pan under your hw tank and route a
drain from it to your pit. *The pan will cvatch the pipe as well.


I've had it happen at least three times that I recall. *Made an unholy
mess. *next place I have, if there's not a floor drain in the room w/
the WH, will have some kind of setup like the OP is describing. *The T/
P valves do weaken with age, and have an unfortunate habit of sticking
open once released.


First time was Xmas morning @ my parents' house while I was home from
college. *I went downstairs before anyone else got up and was going to
run some laundry; stepped into the (carpeted - really? *don't worry,
that's been fixed) laundry room and was greeted with warm
squishiness. *Merry freakin' Christmas, hope you weren't going to take
a nice hot shower.


nate


Nice warm squishiness and carpet in wrong place? *We rented an
apartment in Tx back when. *Carpet in kitchen! *Disposal vomited
contents all over it!

One sometimes wonder what both the builder and buyer thinking on some
of the idiocies one sees.

Harry K


I don't get some people... I once lived in a rental house that had
carpet both in the kitchen and in the basement (where water would
often creep under the basement door after a heavy rain.) Lovely.
Likewise I have seen carpeted laundry rooms, bathrooms (eeeeewwwww!)
you name it. I would explain it to you if I could, but I can't.

nate
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Default Routing T&P relief valve pipe of water heater into sump pit

On Mar 8, 7:12*am, N8N wrote:
On Mar 7, 11:43*pm, Harry K wrote:





On Mar 7, 11:02*am, N8N wrote:


On Mar 7, 8:09*am, jamesgangnc wrote:


On Mar 7, 6:37*am, Mikepier wrote:


My water heater has a 3/4" copper pipe from the T&P valve extending
down about 8" from the floor. I have a sump pit about 5 feet to the
left. I wanted to somehow route this discharge pipe into the pit in
case somethig happens.
Obviously it would be easy if I used some kind of flexible hose rated
for high temps. Is there anything wrong in doing it this way? How is
it usally done?


What kind of floor do you have? *If it's concrete I'd probably just
leave it alone. *I've never seen one of those valves blow myself. *I
have seen them develop leaks that you will not notice if you route it
into your sump pit. *I have seen slow leak failures of hw tanks as
well as catastrophic failures. *All were the tank leaking, not the
safety valve. *If you want to do something to protect the floor area
of your basement I'd suggest a pan under your hw tank and route a
drain from it to your pit. *The pan will cvatch the pipe as well.


I've had it happen at least three times that I recall. *Made an unholy
mess. *next place I have, if there's not a floor drain in the room w/
the WH, will have some kind of setup like the OP is describing. *The T/
P valves do weaken with age, and have an unfortunate habit of sticking
open once released.


First time was Xmas morning @ my parents' house while I was home from
college. *I went downstairs before anyone else got up and was going to
run some laundry; stepped into the (carpeted - really? *don't worry,
that's been fixed) laundry room and was greeted with warm
squishiness. *Merry freakin' Christmas, hope you weren't going to take
a nice hot shower.


nate


Nice warm squishiness and carpet in wrong place? *We rented an
apartment in Tx back when. *Carpet in kitchen! *Disposal vomited
contents all over it!


One sometimes wonder what both the builder and buyer thinking on some
of the idiocies one sees.


Harry K


I don't get some people... *I once lived in a rental house that had
carpet both in the kitchen and in the basement (where water would
often creep under the basement door after a heavy rain.) *Lovely.
Likewise I have seen carpeted laundry rooms, bathrooms (eeeeewwwww!)
you name it. *I would explain it to you if I could, but I can't.

nate- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


I have to admit that _I_ put indoor/outdoor carpeting in a finished
room in out basement...but that was only to keep peace in the house.
She relented when I showed her the mushrooms growing in it .

HarryK
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