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I have a small problem at home and it has led me to research AAVs (air admittance valves).
The kitchen sink was draining slowly so I had the line to the septic snaked. Plumber said he found nothing blocking the outflow so he looked around and took off the Oatey AAV and the sink drained normally. I ran to the hardware store and got a new one, put it on and the sink would not drain again. He started to unscrew the new AAV and as soon as he started, the sink drained ok.
In typical local repairmanship fashion, that was offered as the fix; leave the AAV partially unscrewed. I am unlikely to leave it at that.
So, my understanding of AAVs is that they don't really allow the sink to drain by letting air in, there is already a roomful of air on top of the sink water. What they are designed for is to prevent a slug of water from pulling the p-trap water out, which means sewer gas could enter the home (in the absence of a roof vent).
If so, why is this sink experiencing these symptoms??
Let's say it's the cheap Oatey 39012 valve and I want to upgrade to one that will open more readily. The Oatey spec sheet does not give its opening pressure. One called the Sioux Chief says it is sensitive to 0.01" (of what? water? mercury?). The only other one I can find is a Studor which says -0.010PSI.
No, I cannot do away with the AAV and install a 'normal vent' in this location.
*http://www.siouxchief.com/products/drainage/residential/turbovent?template=P3SpecSheets
http://www.studor.net/documents/0400-0004-092013 Mini-Vent.pdf
The kitchen sink was draining slowly so I had the line to the septic snaked. Plumber said he found nothing blocking the outflow so he looked around and took off the Oatey AAV and the sink drained normally. I ran to the hardware store and got a new one, put it on and the sink would not drain again. He started to unscrew the new AAV and as soon as he started, the sink drained ok.
In typical local repairmanship fashion, that was offered as the fix; leave the AAV partially unscrewed. I am unlikely to leave it at that.
So, my understanding of AAVs is that they don't really allow the sink to drain by letting air in, there is already a roomful of air on top of the sink water. What they are designed for is to prevent a slug of water from pulling the p-trap water out, which means sewer gas could enter the home (in the absence of a roof vent).
If so, why is this sink experiencing these symptoms??
Let's say it's the cheap Oatey 39012 valve and I want to upgrade to one that will open more readily. The Oatey spec sheet does not give its opening pressure. One called the Sioux Chief says it is sensitive to 0.01" (of what? water? mercury?). The only other one I can find is a Studor which says -0.010PSI.
No, I cannot do away with the AAV and install a 'normal vent' in this location.
*http://www.siouxchief.com/products/drainage/residential/turbovent?template=P3SpecSheets
http://www.studor.net/documents/0400-0004-092013 Mini-Vent.pdf