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View Full Version : Laundry waste line trap size



Jon mackay
09-23-2010, 12:04 PM
This laundry drain trap is "slightly" over sized.
I was curious what may happen as a result of this, does anyone have any info on drain traps?

Dom D'Agostino
09-23-2010, 01:37 PM
That's just a big mess, and the size is the least of the issues.

Brandon Whitmore
09-23-2010, 01:53 PM
Dis regarding all the other issues, an oversized drain trap will not scour, so it can plug up easier.

Rick Cantrell
09-23-2010, 02:18 PM
Looks like 2" to me, if 2" not a problem.
But the trap depth.... well.

H.G. Watson, Sr.
09-23-2010, 03:31 PM
I think the photographed "squeegie" leaning against the wall and the soil stains on the waste stack and the floor say more than 1,000 words.

One word: EwwwwwwYUCKiePooey! (okay not really a word).

Dangerous: Heath Hazard, Public; Contamination. Licensed Plumber, Master Level, Unpermitted, illegal modifications, Unsafe. Back flow, unvented, cross contamination to water supply.

Need some understanding of waste plumbing? New York State Plumbing Code, its a read.

Jerry Peck
09-23-2010, 05:48 PM
Looks like a standpipe which someone decided to extend, possibly because they were getting odors and sewage out of it ...

... which would make sense because the fitting which was used to connect into the main stack instead acted to connect the main stack into the stand pipe (it looks like a wye installed upside down, meaning some of the crap from above is going to exit into that standpipe.

You know the old saying, right "**** flows downhill"? Well, that photo is a good depiction of just that, and "downhill" is into that standpipe, and liquid seeks its own level, so the standpipe would be full of it too - to the level of that fitting opening into the main stack.

Vern Heiler
09-24-2010, 05:35 AM
Dis regarding all the other issues, an oversized drain trap will not scour, so it can plug up easier.

If you have ever worked on a clothes washer and seen it shoot a one inch column of water across the garage, you wouldn't worry about sediment buildup in the trap. Actually I'm not sure that a standard height trap would leave water in the trap due to the inertia of the water.

Brandon Whitmore
09-24-2010, 03:45 PM
If you have ever worked on a clothes washer and seen it shoot a one inch column of water across the garage

Luckily, I have not. :D

David Bell
09-24-2010, 04:08 PM
Looks like a standpipe which someone decided to extend, possibly because they were getting odors and sewage out of it ...

... which would make sense because the fitting which was used to connect into the main stack instead acted to connect the main stack into the stand pipe (it looks like a wye installed upside down, meaning some of the crap from above is going to exit into that standpipe.

You know the old saying, right "**** flows downhill"? Well, that photo is a good depiction of just that, and "downhill" is into that standpipe, and liquid seeks its own level, so the standpipe would be full of it too - to the level of that fitting opening into the main stack.

Impossible to tell from that pic if it's an upside down tee-wye or not. Could even be a straight tee. But regardless there is no good reason for the trap to be that long.

James Duffin
09-24-2010, 06:19 PM
It looks like to me it is that long so it can sit on the floor.