Solvent Weld P-Trap Best Practice

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wwhitney

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What fixture is this trap for?

If it's a bath or a shower, typically they aren't accessible after installation, and so the best practice would be to use a fully solvent-welded trap, not one with a union in the middle. Certainly there's no point in using a union trap without a second reversible joint nearby to allow disassembly.

A 1-1/2" trap with a union in the middle could be used under a lav, with a trap adapter on the inlet side to adapt to the fixture tailpiece. But I think I prefer using a tubular trap, which puts the trap adapter on the trap arm. That would make rodding through the trap arm feasible by removing the trap.

Cheers, Wayne
 

Bens

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It's for a sink - what you say about rodding is a good point.
I just dislike the PVC trap adapters horizontal - they always seem to leak very subtly when you're not looking...and the tube traps seem so flimsy.

Thanks!
 

Reach4

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It's for a sink - what you say about rodding is a good point.
I just dislike the PVC trap adapters horizontal - they always seem to leak very subtly when you're not looking...and the tube traps seem so flimsy.
You can get 17 gauge brass slip joint p-traps. Not flimsy at all.
 
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