Because the condensation that is being drained from your condensing furnace is coming from your vent pipe.....if there was no trap....your vent gasses would spill out into the living space....
I'm having a high efficiency condensing furnace put in our second floor soon. We're going to insulate the condensate line but I'm wondering why the need for a trap? I understand why we do that in a toilet or sink, to keep sewer gases from backing up unto the house. But why a furnace (or A/C) condensate drain that drains out into the open (fresh) air. Seems to me that deleting the trap would eliminate the major freezing concern with a condensing furnace?
Keith
Because the condensation that is being drained from your condensing furnace is coming from your vent pipe.....if there was no trap....your vent gasses would spill out into the living space....
I need a new signature.....
to allow the water to drain with out it air flowing in the drain line can cause the water to not flow
Check with your hvac installer about the unit. Most condensing furnaces come with an internal trap (ie, a trap inside the system compartment, or just outside it, depending on installation), negating the need for a trap that's external to the system (and don't use two traps). Just like I_bend_metal said, the trap stops flue gases from entering the drain pipe, and allows free flow, or stopping "water slugging". That's also why you have to trap a/c condensate with the evap coil on the negative side of the blower.
Also, with a condensing furnace condensate that's allowed to drain to unconditioned space, or outside the building is subject to freezing. They can put out quite a bit of water, just like a/c during the summer. Now imagine that during freezing temperatures. You wouldn't (shouldn't) leave a water hose connected during the winter, would you? Once it freezes up, it'll back up and cause a mess, just like a clogged a/c condensate line.
Jeremy
same principle, its an air seal
heat tape will also remedy a freezing trap
the trap is on the negative side of the blower. if the trap was not in place, the blower would suck air up through the drain line not allowing the condensate to flow out. thus causing a flooding problem
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What about an AC unit with a condensate pump, do you still need the trap? I would think the pump would prevent the suction of air through the drain pipe.
Generally, the purpose of the trap is to use a column of condensate to prevent air moving into or out of the equipment while still permitting the condensate to drain away. The vent on the line must be downstream from the trap, or else it renders the trap useless.
Hello, Nice site I'm glad I found it.
WaterFurnace II with electric backup (no gas)
This Summer I noticed that my original drain hose with trap kept making the drain light come on. I replaced it with a piece of garden hose, no trap.
It makes a gurgling noise. At first I thought it was pushing air out with the water but a quick test showed that it was sucking air in. Water is draining but it is noisy.
1. Am I doing damage to the pump not having a trap?
2. The drain spout is 2 inches off the ground. The trap made the hose rise 3" off the ground then the hose drained into the sump pump. This seemed wrong to me because the water had to try to rise up 1 inch before dropping. If I want it to be more level my only option would be to have the trap at the very end of the hose hanging over the sump pump area.
I was considering cutting a longer hose and dropping it below the water level in the sump pump because I tested that and it stopped the gurgling noise but not sure that will cause a problem.
Any suggestions welcome.
A properly designed trap should allow water to drain out while preventing air from being sucked into the blower compartment. A trap that's too shallow won't stop the air and a trap that's too deep may lack enough head pressure to force water through the trap and out the low side. Also, the trap needs to have an outlet slightly lower than the inlet. The trap seal should be 2 to 4 inches.
Thanks for the information.
I'm going to clean up the trap that I had, put it back on, and see if i can squeeze it in somewhere and adhere to your measurements.
Thrilled to have such a quick answer about the drain trap on a new efficient furnace. But it seemed so odd to have a cup of open water attached to the side of my furnace that I assumed the installer lost a cover. No, there is no cover. During the warm season it will evaporate; perhaps the owner is supposed to be educated to check and fill that trap each fall. Why would a cover be a bad thing?