From wiki https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drain-waste-vent_system
"In modern plumbing, a drain-waste-vent (or DWV) is part of a system that allows air to enter a plumbing system to maintain proper air pressure to
enable the removal of sewage and greywater from a dwelling. Waste is produced at fixtures such as toilets, sinks, and showers. As the water runs down,
proper venting is required to avoid a vacuum from being created. As the water runs down air must be allowed into the waste pipe either through a roof
vent, or the "drain waste vent." (or DWV)"
The vent does not have to be in roof. In some houses its external on an external wall. To work correctly the vent must be upstream of the flow not
down stream. It is possible to replace the vent with a one way valve that only allows air into the pipe but not out of the pipe. In the diagram the
drain on the left side of the main vertical pipe is fitted with such valve.
In some bodged systems with no vent or the vent in the wrong place when the bath is draining or the toilet is flushed the sink gurgles.
PS: What happens without the vent the water flow down the sewer forms a Sprengel vacuum pump that can suck the water out of other u bends, that
generates the gurgling sounds.
[Edited on 3/2/2020 by wg48temp9] |