DIRECT SUPPLY The salient features of the supply system for city pressure, not already mentioned, are; separate shut-off cocks for the supplies of each fixture; separate lines to each isolated fixture or to each group of fixtures; i-inch supply to all sinks, trays, and baths; I-inch supply to water-closet tanks; and or i-inch branches for lavatories; no traps in supply lines; return cir culation from lavatory hot supply so that hot water can be drawn instantly at the lavatory faucet; storage cylinder for hot water amply large to furnish a hot bath with out robbing the hot service for other purposes; faucet on sediment pipe, so that water can be drawn at that point when desired; and proper stove connection. All shut-offs in direct-pressure work, ex cept where located immediately at the fixture, should be stop and waste, with the waste on the house or fixture side.
On single runs of lead pipe, make all bends on the same size of pipe, of the same radius. Make no bend on any size pipe, except tubing, of less than 3-inch radius to the center of the pipe. Give and i-inch pipe bends 3-inch radius; and } and 1-inch pipe bends, 4-inch radius. Where two pipes of different size run together and bend in opposite directions, give the bend of the smallest pipe the radius prescribed for the bend in the larger one, if practicable.
Where more than one pipe bend in the same direction, make the bends of the pipes form arcs of concentric circles as shown in Figs. 73 and 74. To set off the offsets in Fig.
74, draw line A, at the end of the first bends; and with the proper radii, describe the arcs that outline them. Set off one-eighth of the circumference of the circle corre sponding to the larger arc, and draw line C, cutting the center of the circle. Then produce dotted line D, and set off a square the diagonal of which will give the straight pieces of the offset desired; and produce E parallel to C. Next de scribe the arcs outlining the second bends, finding the center on E from radius equal to the corresponding radius at A, which will be at the intersection of E and B. This brings the offset parts the same distance apart as the runs are. To accomplish this result with iron pipe, the centers of 45-degree fittings would have to be placed at the intersections of tangents of the arcs, thus throwing the fittings in a line deviating 221 degrees from one perpendicular to the run. This plan is the strictly correct way; but
on account of the difficulty of laying out the work, it is more usual to line up offset fittings perpendicular to the runs, and let the offset pieces fall, as they will, nearer to each other, center to center, than are the lines of the runs.
Offset pieces from center to center of fittings exceed in length the distance offset in the ratio indicated by the constants given in the accompanying table. To find the length of an offset piece, center to center of fittings, simply multiply the distance the line is to be offset, by the constant given for the particular fittings to be used.
Water Supply to Fixtures. In a small installation, the running of a separate supply to each fixture is desirable. There is, however, a limit to the number of fixtures and isolated location of them, beyond which the furnishing of separate supplies to each faucet is folly, as, in addition to the confusion of pipes, and the expense, it leaves more ma terial open to possible failure, and does not reduce the chances of lack of service in proportion, the sole object of separate supplies (and of cocks, too) being to avoid losing the service of other fixtures during times when one of them, or its supply or waste, must be repaired.
In a residence job, two main supplies to each bathroom, with separate stops for each fixture, are sufficient; and a return circulating pipe from the lavatory will serve every purpose, as the water is kept hot in the main line to the bath branches.
The pump and kitchen-sink work of a country job of this type is shown in Fig. 75. The pump air-chamber discharge leads up to and over tank. An opening near the pump provides for elevating water by other means if desired. The pump faucet is piped up and over so as to discharge into sink. The tell-tale pipe from tank leads down behind sink-back and out through a nozzle, as shown. The sink supplies are fitted with stop-cocks. The pressure being light, there are no air-chambers to the sink faucets. The supply to pump is from a large cistern.