slonermike
New Member
Hello! Long time listener, first time caller.
I am doing a bathroom remodel. This is my first time plumbing drains DIY, but venting has me a little stuck....(brain clogged?)
Constraints
1. The stack and WC line are 4"
2. All other lines are 2"
3. The right is an existing tub drain.
4. The left is an existing dry vented lav, which I would like to make a double lav.
5. The top is a new line for a shower, which I'd also like to double.
My Options
Pic 1: Dry vent the shower line. Attic access is easy, so I don't mind the labor, but the code logistics are dizzying.
Pic 2: Redirect the lav drain to wet vent the shower. I don't think this gives me enough "dfu" capacity to double the lav and shower drain.
My Question
Is my dry vent setup here (pic 1, the san tee stacked on the 90) the only way, or is there a way I could do it that would require less vertical space? (for example, photo 3, with the horizontal run to the dry vent, which I'm pretty sure doesn't pass code)
I am doing a bathroom remodel. This is my first time plumbing drains DIY, but venting has me a little stuck....(brain clogged?)
Constraints
1. The stack and WC line are 4"
2. All other lines are 2"
3. The right is an existing tub drain.
4. The left is an existing dry vented lav, which I would like to make a double lav.
5. The top is a new line for a shower, which I'd also like to double.
My Options
Pic 1: Dry vent the shower line. Attic access is easy, so I don't mind the labor, but the code logistics are dizzying.
Pic 2: Redirect the lav drain to wet vent the shower. I don't think this gives me enough "dfu" capacity to double the lav and shower drain.
My Question
Is my dry vent setup here (pic 1, the san tee stacked on the 90) the only way, or is there a way I could do it that would require less vertical space? (for example, photo 3, with the horizontal run to the dry vent, which I'm pretty sure doesn't pass code)