Attn: plumbers, electricians home builders alike..... questions..

Started by phalynx, March 20, 2008, 11:08:13 AM

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phalynx

What is the proper placement of electric and plumbing in the wall running horizontal?  What height should they be placed?  Run seperately, grouped?  Not looking for a specific local code, I have none.  I want best practices in the industry.   I will be doing PEX for plumbing.  What do you do when you need to run electrical and plumbing through floor joists?  How does this affect the maximum hole you can cut in them?  I have 2x12's 16" o/c and I don't want to weaken my floor.  Thoughts?  Comments?  Best practices?  No no's?

MountainDon

Pictures = 10K words [from IRC2003]

Exterior & load bearing walls...


Interior non-load bearing walls...


floor joist notches...


Ceiling joists and floor joists, drilled...



AND, of course anything like elctrical cables, PEX, etc that is close to the edge that could be nailed through needs a steel nailer plate to protect it.
Just because something has been done and has not failed, doesn't mean it is good design.


phalynx

Mountaindon,

Good info.  What about plumbing and electrical in the same wall?

MountainDon

Just because something has been done and has not failed, doesn't mean it is good design.

MountainDon

Receptacles (outlets) are about 15 inches (center of box) from the floor, switches about 50". I don't know if that simply customary or specified.  ???
Just because something has been done and has not failed, doesn't mean it is good design.


MountainDon

Quote from: MountainDon on March 20, 2008, 02:06:14 PM
Don't connect them to each other.   ;)
Or if you do be certain to use a GFCI!   rofl rofl rofl

That's a joke. I hope that is perfectly clear.

But it does bring to mind something that shouldn't need mentioning. But then I saw a neighbor get this wrong.

If you have a GFCI receptacle feeding additional standard outlets, it is only those that are downstream from the GFCI that are also protected. Receptacles between the GFCI and the power panel are not protected.
Just because something has been done and has not failed, doesn't mean it is good design.

Redoverfarm

For my recent addition I set mine at 12" off the floor. An old friend ( barn and shed builder) said he put his way further up the wall because he wasn't able to bend over as well.  Maybe later(not that far off) I would have probably wished I would have set mine at 36" ;)

Although a little more wasteful when I ran my wiring on the exterior walls I used the same entry hole to the recepticle as the exit of the wire down below the floor and over to the next recepticle.  Nothing was comprimized except a little more wire.

Plumbing was done the convientional fashion but it was all on interior walls.

phalynx

How does one run the large 3 and 4" waste pipes for sewage through floor joists?  Seems like that violates the "rule" of 1/3's

MountainDon

You are correct, that would violate the rules unless there were very large joists involved.
I've never had the need to work around that situation. We'll see what Scott has to say.
Ideally this would not come about if everything was properly covered during the design stage.

It would seem you have to go under the joist, or have a header on both sides of the DWV with proper supports holding the headers up in place.  :-\

What is the size of the joists involved? Any pictures of where the plumbing has to go?
Just because something has been done and has not failed, doesn't mean it is good design.


phalynx

Design stage???  what's that...  :)  I guess I could run the waste below the joists..  I was concerned about freezing.  That may not happen.  Only gets in the 20's a couple of times down here


PEG688

Quote from: phalynx on March 20, 2008, 07:45:17 PM


#1:  Design stage???  what's that...  :) 


#2: I guess I could run the waste below the joists..  I was concerned about freezing.  That may not happen.  Only gets in the 20's a couple of times down here



#1:  Bruce good one [shocked] rofl

#2: Think dropped soffit / pipe chase , those lines SHOULD be sloped so they won't have waste or water in them anyway , RIGHT??  [toilet] See how he goes right down , toilets don't have pee traps there "built in" to the toilet it self.

    Plumber rules ,

  #1 $hit does not flow uphill , unless you pump it so thats not a hard and fast rule anymore  ::)

#2: Pay days on Friday.

#3: Don't chew your finger nails.  [shocked]   [yuk]

  Order of installing , plumber / pipes first , HVAC / heating next if forced air , or some such ducted heat is used, sparky  (electrician) gets the last shot at cutting all the good work the carpenters have completed wire get around things easier than pipes and ducting.   
When in doubt , build it stout with something you know about .

ScottA

I usually use a chain saw and let the frammers get red tagged. I'm usually gone before they get their inspections.  d*








Ok I'm kidding. If you're going to run pipes large in floor joists they need to be 2x12's. I have been allowed to put 3/4 plywood on both sides of a joist and then bore a hole through on the odd occation but usually just one joist. Best bet if you have smaller joist is to drop down below and enclose the pipes in an insulated sofit. I think Don's pics covered the other questions and Peg took care of the plumming rules.

phalynx



Here is a pic of what I had thought about the waste water upstairs.  I was going to run the 2 blue waste lines down the wall and "T" them into a line sloped to the septic exit below the first floor.  Is that the normal method?

bobtheengineer

1)  Don't worry about waste or vent lines freezing.  They aren't sitting full of water, and they always have heat flowing thru them from the sewer or septic

2)  To drain the bathtub you'll need either a 1 1/2 or 2" waste line.  Either a 2 1/8 or 2 9/16" hole.  It is no problem to drill that size hole in a 2x12.  You won't have to reinforce the hole, unless its within a couple of feet from a support location.  The trick about a beam, is that the only place the beam sees alot of shear, is close to the supports.  The rest of the span doesnt see much shear, and you really don't even need the center part of the beam. 

Ok, I kinda went on an engineer's tangent there, but you get the general idea.  Good luck


Redoverfarm

phalynx I am not that familar with your framing on the first floor. Is there a partition directly under the 2nd or 1/2 floor above.  I assume that what you were saying is that this is for the upstairs bathroom. Is there anyway to T the two together in the floor joist and run them down through the partition to the waste line below the floor.

I am planning a 1/2 bath in the loft of my cabin.  I will run all the waste and supply up through the 1st floor bathroom partition and tie everything together in the crawlspace. Of course in mine the two bathrooms will be stacked one above the other.

OK I went back to your post of the floor plans and it appears that there are two options I would consider. Running the sink and commode line toward the wall that the bathtub is against and then running it down the partition behind what I think is the frig and stove wall.  The other would be to run all the 2nd story to the closet of the first floor which backs to the stairs. Then below deck to the downstairs kitchen plumbing and bathroom plumbing.

Willy

I normally use my hammer claw to make a mark on the wall for the lower wall plugs (aprox 16" to top of box) and then I set the switches at 4 ft to the top of the box this makes sheet rock easy to cut out on the first course.

Counter tops you should set the plugs around 6 inches up measured to the bottom. On counter tops I snap a chalk line and make sure they are perfect and this includes any shimming that may be use on the cabnits. You will see any difference in height forever if they are not right!! If you are using tile on the back splash make sure the plugs are set in a way you only cut one course to put them in. With tile it really shows if a plug is off even a quarter of a inch in height!

On your plumbing I am not sure but it looks like it is all up/stairs. I don't know if you have any walls down below but if one is close to the walls above I would drop the waste pipe down the inside non bearing wall and not wipe out the outside main bearing wall cutting it up for that big a pipe. That way if you have to bore out a joist it is supported by a wall below. You can always make a inside wall 2x6 for those pipes. Once below the floor joist slope it to the opening in the foundation off hangers or plumers tape. Try to keep your water pipes out of outside walls if you can it helps in freeze up in real cold areas.

Other than that check your local area plumbing & electrical codes for circuit lay out, GFCI in bath rooms, kitchens etc and Arc Fault Breakers feeding bedroom plugs and lights.

You need at least 2-20 amp appliance circuits in the kitchen on the counter tops also one for a washer, one for a dish washer, one 15 amp for the garbage grinder, 20 amp cir for the built in microwave, 30-50 amp 240 volt for a electric stove top or free standing range.

30 amp 240 volt for the electric water heater and circuits sized for the type of heat if it is electric.

Lights and plugs in the rest of the cabin need to be at least one 15 amp circuit per 500 square ft of living space. You need a outside GFCI receptacle, porch light and switched lights in the kitchen, bathroom, living room, bedroom etc.

Main Service Panels cannot go over sinks, counter tops or washers, not in bathrooms or closets either. You need full ceiling to floor clearance and min 3 ft wide area around the panel so yopu can work on it safe later. The service conductors need to be installed to your local code requirement and you should get a copy of what they want before setting the meter/panel on or in the house. Good luck and there are tons of little electrical/plumbing codes things it would take a 500 page book to cover them all. Mark

ED: broke into sections to make it easier to read - MD

phalynx

Redover,  I like the 2nd method you spoke of but I don't know if it would work.  That closet downstairs is the washer/dryer location so there is a need for wastewater there too.  But, if you look at the drawing above, the horizontal line above the stairs is actually a double 2x12 beam to support the 2x12's running to the stair opening.  I would then be cutting a 3" hole in it to run the waste line.  I don't have a problem with that, but I am concerned about the affect of the hole in the beam.

See the beem in this pic.



You can see here in this pic, the last vertical stud by the stairs is where the wall will be coming towards the front of the stairs.


phalynx


John Raabe

This is a great evolving tutorial on plumbing and wiring. Nice work guys!  [cool]

I added a link to this thread on the forum topics at the HOMEPAGE.
None of us are as smart as all of us.

MountainDon

Are you doing your own electrical, Bruce Scott?
Just because something has been done and has not failed, doesn't mean it is good design.


phalynx

I think my name became "Bruce" at somepoint.   :)  Maybe it's from that movie "They call me Bruce".  Anyway, my name is Scott but I'll go by Bruce now.  [cool]

I am doing my own electrical and plumbing.  I have done some electrical before.  Plumbing is completely new to me.  It's just $#$$ work right?  I want to follow best practices/code as best as I can.

MountainDon

Scott. Who knows how those things come about? I worked at one place where every other guy called me Bob.  ???

Some things I was confused about when I first got into doing my own electrical on renovations or new work.

When the code says "outlet" they mean receptacles, switches and light fixtures. (Under NEC receptacles are the things most people call outlets,... what you plug a lamp ot TV into). So when code says all outlets in a bedroom must be protected by an AFCI breaker, they include the lighting circuits and the AC powered smoke detector as well.

The way the code is worded referring to the spacing of receptacles around a room can be confusing. They state no point shall be more than 6 feet from a receptacle. A quick read of that might make you believe there must be a receptacle every 6 feet. NOT so. What they mean is a receptacle every 12 feet. In other words an appliance (table lamp, TV, fan, etc with a 6 foot long cord could theoretically be placed anywhere around the wall perimeter.

Switched lights in living areas and bedrooms don't have to be ceiling mounted lights. They can be switched outlets, usually one half of an outlet switched, the half half live at the time. Kitchen and bath lighting must be permanently mounted.

Building suppliers will usually have a handy book that covers all the things you are likely to need to know. I've a copy of Wiring Simplified that is based on the NEC. It's 200+ pages and helped me pass the homeowners electrical test for DIY work building permits a couple of times. It seems to have all the answers, though sometimes it takes some reading and thinking.

Just because something has been done and has not failed, doesn't mean it is good design.

MountainDon

"Old work" boxes, etc refer to new work in old places???
Just because something has been done and has not failed, doesn't mean it is good design.

Willy

Quote from: phalynx on March 21, 2008, 02:24:59 PM
I think my name became "Bruce" at somepoint.   :)  Maybe it's from that movie "They call me Bruce".  Anyway, my name is Scott but I'll go by Bruce now.  [cool]

I am doing my own electrical and plumbing.  I have done some electrical before.  Plumbing is completely new to me.  It's just $#$$ work right?  I want to follow best practices/code as best as I can.
Well I was never a plumber but when I did my homes complete plumbing system well pump to tolet I bought a book to look at and jumped right in. I passed 100% on my first inspection. I have had no problems with the plumbing in 13 years so I must have got it right I think? Now on the electrical you can do the same but I think the little things in the electrical code can add up to big bucks if you do them wrong or maybe worse cause a home to burn down. Leaking water is one thing but loose conections, over loaded circuits is a different story. Mark

Redoverfarm

phalynx If I understand you correctly the closet will be for the washer and dryer. I think if you look at using the framing of the wall of the closet for the chase of the waste it might be doable.  If I remember correctly your toilet and sink are on one side and the tub/shower on the other.  If you just routed the tub drain over to the larger toilet drain 3" then you shouldn't compromise anything except a 2" hole to cross over to the larger drain line.  IF you are worried about the framing of the stairs that can be re-fortified with the header of the closet but I don't think IMO that will be a big issue.  If the wall goes all the way to the ceiling arouond the stairs it might also be a good place to vent to as well.  The washer could also be tapped into the down pipe with a sanitary "T" eliminating a need for any additional pipe through the floor.  I am sure that there are "plumbers" on the forrum maybe they will pick up and give you/us an opinion.