Richard
Super Member
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2000
- Messages
- 5,009
- Location
- Knoxville, TN
- Tractor
- International 1066 Full sized JCB Loader/Backhoe and a John Deere 430 to mow with
sigh... and I think I know why.
Scenario: Our air handler system is in basement (which will be finished). It's technically in the garage.
The drain pan has a drain that goes to a sump pump and this pump is drained/routed with the HVAC lines, up to the ceiling, along the ceiling and finally outdoors. Once it gets outdoors, I have it merged into a simple drain line to take it away from the house.
We have frequent power outages and when those happen, the water in the exit line comes back INTO the sump and gets dumped onto the floor
So...
This past summer, I was redoing the utility room and one thing I wanted to do was take the vertical drain away from the sump pump and make it gravity fed so I'd "never" have any wet floor issues again.
OK.. so I made a drain, snaked it around the room, brought it to this location and now, the drain from the pan, is connected directly to my plumbing.
I even have a "P" trap in it HOWEVER, it seems the volume of water in the trap isn't a whole lot (3/4" line) and over time will evaporate allowing the air handler unit to pull some fumes backwards from the septic system and very nicely, blow it throughout the house.
I've since come to know/understand that the typical way this is done is to have a drain (say, in the floor, which will NOT work for me) and have the air handler drain DRIP into said drain, having an 'air break' between the two, instead of having it hard plumbed like mine is.
I'm not sure how to word the above so I hope that makes sense.
Bottom line... mine is currently hard plumbed to the actual pan under the air handler.
Knowing I might someday need/want to work in here, I DID install some threaded ...uh... unions! that's the word.
So I've got a threaded union here... any merit in removing part of this line, cutting a section out and inserting into said section, a 1-way valve?
Would a 1-way valve have enough 'stopping power' to prevent gasses from working their way back during less humid times?
During warm/humid months, this is NOT an issue but I'm learning that during the less humid times of the year... it seems it IS an issue and I'd really like to fix this and JUST as strongly, I'd like to STAY AWAY from the electric sump pump I have so I can totally eliminate water puddles during times of no power.
Any thoughts??
Scenario: Our air handler system is in basement (which will be finished). It's technically in the garage.
The drain pan has a drain that goes to a sump pump and this pump is drained/routed with the HVAC lines, up to the ceiling, along the ceiling and finally outdoors. Once it gets outdoors, I have it merged into a simple drain line to take it away from the house.
We have frequent power outages and when those happen, the water in the exit line comes back INTO the sump and gets dumped onto the floor
So...
This past summer, I was redoing the utility room and one thing I wanted to do was take the vertical drain away from the sump pump and make it gravity fed so I'd "never" have any wet floor issues again.
OK.. so I made a drain, snaked it around the room, brought it to this location and now, the drain from the pan, is connected directly to my plumbing.
I even have a "P" trap in it HOWEVER, it seems the volume of water in the trap isn't a whole lot (3/4" line) and over time will evaporate allowing the air handler unit to pull some fumes backwards from the septic system and very nicely, blow it throughout the house.
I've since come to know/understand that the typical way this is done is to have a drain (say, in the floor, which will NOT work for me) and have the air handler drain DRIP into said drain, having an 'air break' between the two, instead of having it hard plumbed like mine is.
I'm not sure how to word the above so I hope that makes sense.
Bottom line... mine is currently hard plumbed to the actual pan under the air handler.
Knowing I might someday need/want to work in here, I DID install some threaded ...uh... unions! that's the word.
So I've got a threaded union here... any merit in removing part of this line, cutting a section out and inserting into said section, a 1-way valve?
Would a 1-way valve have enough 'stopping power' to prevent gasses from working their way back during less humid times?
During warm/humid months, this is NOT an issue but I'm learning that during the less humid times of the year... it seems it IS an issue and I'd really like to fix this and JUST as strongly, I'd like to STAY AWAY from the electric sump pump I have so I can totally eliminate water puddles during times of no power.
Any thoughts??