Fuel-Gas Vent Terminations
The type of venting materials used for fuel-gas vent terminations depends on the operating characteristics of the
appliance being vented. Appliances can be characterized with respect to:
read more
Piping should be supported to ensure alignment and to prevent sagging. Piping in the ground should be laid on a
proper bed. Piping above ground should be supported with hooks, straps, bands, brackets and/or hangers suitable for
the size of the piping, of adequate strength and quality, and located at intervals so as to prevent sagging, damage
and vibration. Other piping should not support piping. Piping should not put strain upon connected equipment or
appliances.
read more
Individual, branch and circuit vents are permitted to terminate with a connection to an individual or branch-type air-admittance valve. Stack vents and vent stacks should be permitted to terminate to stack-type air-admittance valves. Access should be provided to all air-admittance valves. The air-admittance valve should be rated according to the size of the vent to which it is connected. www.nachi.org
read more
A common vent is one vent that serves more than one fixture, functioning as an individual vent for each fixture. Wet
venting is venting single or double bathroom groups or combinations thereof, where one vent pipe may serve all the
fixtures connected to the wet vent. Waste-stack venting is venting individual fixtures through a drainage stack, and
the over-sized stack functions as the vent. Circuit venting is venting up to eight fixtures with a single vent pipe.
A combination drain-and-vent system is restricted to floor drains, sinks and lavatories, and relies on the
over-sized drain pipe. Island-fixture venting has a vent installed below the flood-level rim of the fixture before
rising to connect to another vent.
read more
Where the drainage system cannot drain by gravity to the sewer, an automatic pump or ejector can be used to discharge
the soil and waste. The cover for the pump should be tightly sealed (gas-tight). Sumps, other than pneumatic
ejectors, should be vented with a minimum 1-1/4-inch diameter vent pipe. Pumps use mechanical methods to discharge,
and pneumatic ejectors use air pressure. Grinder pumps and ejectors pulverize solids to a near-liquid state and pump
the slurry to the drainage system.
read more
ExperiencedAll CMIs® have completed at least 1,000 fee-paid inspections and/or hours of training and education
combined.EstablishedAll CMIs® have been in the inspection business for at least three years prior to becoming
Board-Certified.ProfessionalAll CMIs® abide by the inspection industry's toughest Code of Ethics.EducatedAll CMIs®
have completed professional education prior to being approved.VettedAll CMIs® have agreed to submit to periodic
criminal background checks.The BestNot everyone can become a Certified Master Inspector®. Hiring a CMI® means hiring
the best.
read more
Hot water is defined as water of a temperature of 110° F (43° C) or hotter. Tempered water ranges from 85° F to 110°
F (29° C to 43° C), and the device supplying the tempered water must limit the temperature to 110° F (43° C).
read more